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Roger Goodell Killed the Goose that Laid the Golden Egg
Townhall.com ^ | October 16, 2017 | Thomas J. Farnan

Posted on 10/16/2017 8:03:08 AM PDT by Kaslin

Y.A. Tittle died last week. A Hall of Fame quarterback for the New York Giants, he is best known for the taking a knee on a football field. Actually, it was two knees.

In September 1964, the Giants were facing the Pittsburgh Steelers at old Pitt Stadium. Tittle was 38 years old and at the tail end of a 17-year professional career. He had led his team to three straight NFL Championship Games, in ’61, ’62, and ’63, but did not win.

In the game against the Steelers, he dropped back into his own end zone to throw a pass. He was viciously knocked to the ground and his helmet flew off. The pass was intercepted for a touchdown.

He struggled to his knees and stared blankly into the open field, bleeding from his head. The other players backed off and left him to himself. At that moment, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette photographer Morris Berman snapped a picture.

It is among the greatest sports photographs ever taken. There is Muhammad Ali standing over Sonny Liston and Ben Hogan with his one iron at Merion’s final hole. But those are about achievement and victory. This is about the struggle to rise after being knocked down.

People watch the NFL to revel in such mythology. A game where redemption is purchased at a great physical cost serves as an allegory for the common man.

In the 1960s, American culture was fracturing along a fault line, with the common man on one side and scorn against his mores and values on the other. The league’s commissioner at the time, Pete Rozelle, chose to take the side of ordinary Americans in the raging culture war, because they were his natural audience. The league sent star players to visit troops in Vietnam and issued rules requiring players to stand upright during the playing of the National Anthem.

In 1967, the NFL produced a film that combined sideline and game footage titled, “They Call It Pro Football.” The film was unapologetically hokey. It was crew cuts and high tops and lots of chain smoking into sideline telephones. With a non-rock, non-folk, non-“what’s happening now” soundtrack, heavy on trumpets and kettle drums. John Facenda, who would come to be called “The Voice of God” for his work with NFL Films, provided the vaulting narration. The production began with the words, “It starts with a whistle and ends with a gun.” There was nothing Radical Chic about it.

The NFL surpassed baseball as America’s pastime with careful branding that conformed to the tastes and sensibilities of middle-class Americans – Nixon’s silent majority. A half century later, Roger Goodell would kill the goose that laid the golden egg.

In August 2016, America was experiencing a polarizing presidential election. San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick sat during the playing of the national anthem, to protest injustice. It was a politically divisive act directed at fans who regard the national anthem as something sacred. The league did not lift a finger to stop him.

Most employers don’t let their workers make controversial political statements to their customers. It is why you do not know your UPS driver’s views on the expansion of NATO. The Constitution does not prohibit private businesses from regulating speech during work.

A savvier commissioner would have reminded Kaepernick that he is being paid millions to wear the logo of the NFL, and the league does not permit players to use its brand to flaunt their personal politics. Instead, Roger Goodell permitted the pregame ceremonies to become the focus of intense political scrutiny, as the media lined up to catalog whether players stood, sat or knelt during the national anthem.

He knew, no doubt, that protesting the national anthem would be offensive to some people. With Hillary Clinton’s inevitable triumph looming, it was generally considered okay to offend those people. They would be described by Hillary Clinton a few days after Kaepernick’s protest as a basket of deplorables. The NFL was just pandering to the prevailing sentiment when it green lighted Kaepernick’s cause. Then Trump won.

The rule before Trump was that half the country had to endure any scold, put up with all name calling, and generally be treated like idiots by popular culture. The brilliant lights who made the rules never considered that scolding half the country may, in itself, have been divisive. And that people have been stewing about it for years.

When the 2017 seasons started, President Trump railed at the NFL for permitting the protests. Rather than back down, the NFL doubled down, employing the double speak of the cornered weakling. Try to imagine John Facenda speaking the words, “The NFL and our players are at our best when we help create a sense of unity in our country and our culture” – you can’t.

Television ratings have tanked. By permitting its games to become a forum for liberal politics, the NFL broke faith with its fan base.

Y.A. Tittle quit football after kneeling in the end zone and sold insurance. He hung Berman’s photograph in his office with the caption, “Nothing Comes Easy.” Last week, his death coincided with the end the NFL mythology he represented. The league is no longer a fanfare for the common man, an allegory about the struggle to get up after being knocked down.

It is easy to drop to one knee in a deliberate pose to protest something. Rising from two knees after spending yourself in a physical battle, that’s not so easy. It is why people watched, Roger.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: colinkaepernick; goodell; goodellsucks; nfl; nflprotests; rogergoodell; thanksroger
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To: Kaslin

Goodell: the anti-Rozelle.


21 posted on 10/16/2017 8:20:50 AM PDT by clintonh8r (Whatever is good in me is thanks to my faith and my family.)
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To: Alberta's Child
Goodell gets a bit of a bad rap on this. The NFL has no authority to discipline players over this crap. It's the individual owners who are the real culprits here, and even they don't have a lot of options to deal with this other than benching the malcontents on their rosters.

I disagree. There are many instances where Goodell ruled with an iron fist and never consulted "owners." I don't recall there being a meeting about 9/11 references on cleats when they were outlawed. Was there a meeting with owners about the Cowboys honoring LEO killed defending BLM protests? Just fines as I recall.

I don't follow it that closely today. But as I understand it, there are branding rules in place and there was a rule about standing for the National Anthem. All the Commissioner needed to do was be consistent with former management policy and ruling.

22 posted on 10/16/2017 8:21:02 AM PDT by Tenacious 1 (You couldn't pay me enough to be famous for being stupid!)
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To: Kaslin

23 posted on 10/16/2017 8:21:09 AM PDT by outofsalt ( If history teaches us anything it's that history rarely teaches us anything)
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To: Dilbert San Diego
I think my favorite sentences in this article are:

"The rule before Trump was that half the country had to endure any scold, put up with all name calling, and generally be treated like idiots by popular culture. The brilliant lights who made the rules never considered that scolding half the country may, in itself, have been divisive. And that people have been stewing about it for years."

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Liberals don't care to understand that their 'rights' end where ours begin. Give them an inch, they'll take a mile & cram theirs down your throat. No more.

24 posted on 10/16/2017 8:21:31 AM PDT by Qiviut (Obama's Legacy in two words: DONALD TRUMP)
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To: Kaslin

He and all the anti-American BLM advocates have shown their true colors. I for I WILL NOT contribute in ANY way to an institution that allows these a-holes to disrespect our country flag and veterans in any way


25 posted on 10/16/2017 8:25:23 AM PDT by clamper1797 (We are getting close to the last "box")
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To: Kaslin

The NFL and Their Westboro Baptist Church Protesters

We live in a great country that allows us to protest freely - but there are proper times and venues to protest. Take for example the Westboro Baptist Church protesting outside our fallen military funerals with their ‘God hates fags’ signs. I think all would agree, including NFL players, that this is both an inappropriate time and place – not to mention a false narrative.

But isn’t what these NFL players are doing even worse? They are essentially protesting outside all of fallen solders graves with a narrative of ‘Cops hate minorities’. I would even venture to say there are many veterans that would rather they protest outside their funeral than disrespect the flag that so many died for during our National Anthem.

The irony here is we are actually watching the NFL’s funeral due to the actions of these players. Their protest may cause future athletes, including minorities, to never have the opportunities that has been provided to them in this great country.

26 posted on 10/16/2017 8:26:11 AM PDT by Heartlander (Prediction: Increasingly, logic will be seen as a covert form of theism. - Denyse O'Leary)
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To: Kaslin

I used to love the old highlights shows with John Facenda’s voice, usually to orchestrated songs like “What do you get with a drunken sailor?”

The announcing then was far superior. Down and distance. Not a bunch of psycho babble about how a player “feels” being second string or having been traded.

In fact, in the NFL produced Super Bowl XI with the Cowboys and Dolphins, there isn’t a single reference to the fact that Herb Adderly, the great GB cornerback, had come over that year and plugged a key weakness in that Dallas team, or that Mike Ditka, one of the mainstays of Da Bears, was now wearing a silver star. There wasn’t even a COMMENT on Duane Thomas’s goofy antics of not talking to the press the entire year. Just football.


27 posted on 10/16/2017 8:26:23 AM PDT by LS ("Castles Made of Sand, Fall in the Sea . . . Eventually" (Hendrix))
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To: Qiviut

Black Leagues Matter


28 posted on 10/16/2017 8:26:44 AM PDT by ActresponsiblyinVA
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To: V_TWIN

“The NFL and our players are at our best when we help create a sense of unity in our country and our culture”

Which means right now the NFL is at its worst, since what it is doing is the opposite of the statement above.


29 posted on 10/16/2017 8:26:55 AM PDT by SaxxonWoods (CNN IS ISIS.)
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To: Kaslin

30 posted on 10/16/2017 8:27:03 AM PDT by Hatteras
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To: Kaslin
Haven't watched an NFL game since KaperDICK took the knee.

Kind of got a BIG part of my life back.

If I do have any interest in WHO won.. I bring up the online website for sports odds at the end of the day and check the scores.

31 posted on 10/16/2017 8:27:09 AM PDT by VideoDoctor
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To: Jolla
Here is the famous photo of Y.A. Tittle "kneeling" in the end zone:

 photo ya tittle.jpg
32 posted on 10/16/2017 8:29:17 AM PDT by Right_Wing_Madman
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To: lgjhn23

“Insane commie libs are very well-known to ALWAYS “kill the goose that lays the golden eggs”. They poison everything they touch. The NFL is just about a classic example as anyone would ever want to see.
Education, finance, religion, etc.....You name it, they’ve killed it.
The POSs belong in an insane asylum. They’re useless as teats on a boar hog”.

EXACTLY! My conclusion in watching all this is that liberal modern day democrat’s sole purpose is to KILL HAPPINESS wherever they find it.


33 posted on 10/16/2017 8:29:32 AM PDT by Captain7seas (UNexit. Make America Great Again!)
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To: V_TWIN

The statement is anti-multiculturalism, regarding football. But the players offended a lot of the cultures in the US when they did what they did.


34 posted on 10/16/2017 8:29:34 AM PDT by robroys woman (So you're not confused, I'm male.)
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To: Jolla
they have no men like this to look up to; DiMaggio, Tittle, Neil Armstrong
When Armstrong died in 2012, my local Gannett, pinko-commie rag, buried the story on page four. Five years later and I'm still pi$$ed.
35 posted on 10/16/2017 8:29:39 AM PDT by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: Hatteras

Wasn’t that the game where Tittle injured his ribs, broke his sternum, and sustained a concussion?


36 posted on 10/16/2017 8:30:06 AM PDT by mewzilla (Was Obama surveilling John Roberts? Might explain a lot.)
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To: ActresponsiblyinVA

That pretty much boils it down to brass tacks.


37 posted on 10/16/2017 8:30:11 AM PDT by Qiviut (Obama's Legacy in two words: DONALD TRUMP)
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To: ClearCase_guy

The NFL years ago joined the top ranks of the elite, ruling, leftist class

They got there by maximizing every effort to squeeze money from their brand, through government, political, media, wall street, etc...

Now the NFL are at the top of America’s oligarchy, and having shown themselves to be insiders and corrupted political hacks, they have nowhere to go but down.


38 posted on 10/16/2017 8:31:27 AM PDT by PGR88
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To: Kaslin

‘He had led his team to three straight NFL Championship Games, in ’61, ’62, and ’63, but did not win.’

I remember the ‘62 game vividly; Giants and Packers, a relentless icy wind howling, and the game being blacked out in the greater New York area...my father and I tried all day to maneuver the antenna to pick up a Philly broadcast, but it was no go...


39 posted on 10/16/2017 8:31:58 AM PDT by IrishBrigade
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To: LS

You probably grew up with the same NFL I did. I have watched every Super Bowl, starting with the first one when I was six years old. The NFL you described from NFL Films (by the way, it was Super Bowl VI, not XI) no longer exists. As a reason why, well, just compare the team photos from 1967-1972 and for the past five years.


40 posted on 10/16/2017 8:38:05 AM PDT by henkster (The View: A psychiatric group therapy session where the shrink has stepped out of the room.)
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