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The Remarkably Quiet Death of Tackle Football
Chronicles Magazine ^ | January 31, 2025 | John Ziegler

Posted on 02/02/2025 9:14:21 PM PST by Red Badger

Tackle football currently dominates the landscape of our national culture like no sport has done for almost a century. Almost single-handedly, it is keeping the major television networks—otherwise in a death spiral of their own badly broken business model’s making—alive. The Super Bowl is now the last remaining annual non-holiday happening we can legitimately consider a communal event, uniting Americans of virtually all demographics, at least for about five hours.

Paradoxically, tackle football, at least in the form we have come to know it, is also vanishing right before our eyes. Remarkably, though we live in a social media era that affords most subjects far more coverage and in far more detail than they deserve, almost no one is talking about this astonishing and seemingly contradictory development.

It could not be more obvious to avid fans of professional and college (now “minor league professional”) football that this once uniquely American sport is far less physical than it was just five to ten years ago. It is also clear that those in charge of the sport are dedicated, for various—mostly economic—reasons, to continue to push the sport in this feminized direction. It seems they will not stop until the game that became so popular in the golden era of the television age—the 1970s and ’80s—that it overtook baseball as the national pastime is completely transformed.

Quantifying exactly how soft tackle football has recently become is a difficult task. It is especially difficult for those under the age of 25 who, unless they happen to catch old clips on YouTube or TikTok, have little against which to compare the current version of football. Even at the professional level, the sport is now closer to the “flag” variety than the traditional “tackle” game. (In super-liberal California, where I live, there really isn’t even much need for helmets anymore, except in the top high school games).

While it is oddly never mentioned during football broadcasts, perhaps the best way to illustrate the dramatic change is just to look at the player’s uniforms. Skill players, especially in college ball, routinely wear what can only be called shorts—which are often further off the knee than the variety worn by their counterparts in basketball. Similarly, jerseys no longer have sleeves because the size of the shoulder pads has shrunk as significantly as the revenue ESPN receives from the badly ailing Golden Goose that was once cable television subscription fees.

The rules of the sport have been radically altered in an attempt to prevent injuries, especially concussions, at almost any cost. Tackles, which used to provoke roars from the crowd, can now—even without clear intent to injure an opponent—easily result in major penalties, ejections, suspensions, and fines. The defense has been so declawed that it seems almost miraculous when there are games during which the scoreboard doesn’t regularly light up like an old-school pinball machine.

This fundamental change in the nature of the sport has been most obvious when it comes to protecting the quarterback—the most important and glamorous position in this modern world where celebrity surpasses substance. Quarterbacks, who were regularly brutalized in the old game, are now so sheltered by the rules that they often taunt weaponless defenders by pretending to slide (thus ending the play and forcing the defense to avoid even breathing on them too heavily) or going out of bounds, before reversing course to pick up extra yardage, surely all the while flashing a Cheshire Cat grin.

There have been several key moments that explain how we got to this point so rapidly, and why the pendulum has swung from America falling in love with a sport that was often far too violent, to the emasculation of tackle football to the point where the game is now so safe that it is paradoxically endangered.

In 2015, Will Smith starred in a movie called Concussion, which focused largely on the horrors which befell several members of the iconic four-time Super Bowl championship team, the Pittsburgh Steelers, allegedly because of the physical toll a far more vicious version of the game had taken on their bodies and minds. One of the stars of that legendary team, the late Hall of Famer Franco Harris (who supported the film), became a rather close friend of mine, so this is a subject about which I am very familiar.

In short, concussions and their apparent connection to a debilitating brain condition known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)—a connection that may be more complex than the simplistic media narrative surrounding it—became a mortal threat to the massive business that is the Football Industrial Complex. Wishing to avoid the fate of tobacco companies, the NFL led the way in subtly and quietly making the game safer, especially with respect to head injuries.

Their intent, while motivated by survival, was mostly noble—as were a lot of the practical changes. There is no question that football is now much safer at every level of play than at any previous time. Ironically, parents are nevertheless now more hesitant than ever to allow their young children to play tackle football, particularly when the alternative of noncontact “flag football” is becoming so popular in its place. This is partially due to flag football’s open support from the NFL, to the point where it is slated to be an Olympic sport in 2028.

As so often happens in this culture, however, we tend to overreact to every moral panic in order to properly signal our virtue, and things have gone too far in the other direction.

In 2020, when the COVID panic overtook the Western world, tackle football was made vulnerable in ways that inflicted far more lasting harm than routinely having to cancel games and greatly limiting crowd sizes. These measures—which now seem to have been motivated, at best, by societal symbolism and, at worst, by a political desire to prevent any resistance to the medical establishment—were damaging. But their direct impact on sports was largely temporary.

Thanks to the general overreaction to the COVID pandemic, however, we also fundamentally changed the rules of medical freedom. For the first time in modern history, it was “decided” that we as a society had the moral and legal authority to tell everyone else what kind of decisions they are allowed to make about their own medical risk management. (Please spare me the rebuttal that mask and vaccine mandates, among other tyrannical measures, somehow helped others not become infected, as we now have overwhelming data proving that always dubious premise was false.)

Quite simply, in a country that no longer accepts the notion that adults are all allowed to make their own decisions regarding what kind of medical risk they want to accept, you just cannot have tackle football. At least not as it was before concussions became a major concern in the corporate news and sports media complex, thus endangering the sport’s huge profit margins.

In October 2022, there was a seminal moment within corporate media that told us a lot about where things are today and where they are likely heading. On ESPN’s Monday Night Football telecast, color analyst Troy Aikman objected to an obviously absurd roughing-the-passer penalty by saying that the NFL needed to “take the dresses off the quarterbacks.”

Kansas City Chiefs defensive lineman Chris Jones sacks Raiders quarterback Derek Carr on Oct. 10, 2022, in a flagged play that caused commentator Troy Aikman to remark that quarterbacks need to “take the dresses off.” (ESPN Monday Night Football)

Those of us who understand how lethal the cancel culture’s voluntary police force has become immediately braced for Aikman to get demolished. While he did get widespread criticism—more for alleged sexism than for criticizing a clearly ridiculous penalty—he also received enough support from those fed up with the cancel culture to survive the incident relatively unscathed.

One of the many relevant aspects of this incident, however, was that Aikman was not just a quarterback in his playing days but one who endured many concussions. Yet he was advocating for less overt protection for his former position. Tellingly, Aikman is not alone among former quarterbacks now in the broadcasting field who have been similarly outspoken with regard to the game becoming too soft, with all-time great Tom Brady most prominent among them (though, importantly, he generally does not make such statements on the game broadcasts themselves).

Still, something very interesting has happened since the Aikman “dresses” episode. Network commentators have almost uniformly ceased to make strong comments condemning the way penalties on defensive players are radically altering the game in a negative direction. Now, the most you are likely to get from a network announcer is a very mild questioning of such a call, followed by a toss to the “rules expert,” who, being a former official, is never going to express anything more incendiary than mild disagreement with even the most outrageous flag, followed by the broadcast team quickly moving on.

While there is no way to be certain why the TV networks have suddenly taken this profoundly different tack, it is my informed speculation that the NFL made it clear to their broadcast partners, who are more than willing to bend over backward for the content creator keeping them in business, to “knock it off” when it comes to openly criticizing the wussification of their product. You see, without the added juice of a network announcer ripping a preposterous penalty, the clip of such a play no longer has the same potential to go viral on X or TikTok, and, consequently, the NFL can avoid the organized outrage over what is systematically happening to the sport.

This tactic has been extremely effective, allowing the NFL to get away with rule changes that would have caused a massive uproar just a few years ago. For instance, the new kickoff formation, created solely for the purpose of cutting back on high-speed collisions, has been an absolute disaster. Almost every kickoff now results in nothing but another touchback, with men formerly known as special teams warriors now reduced to pathetic eunuchs forced to go through an embarrassing ritual, all so we can pretend that there are still kickoffs in a sport called FOOTball.

Donald Trump ripped this farce during the presidential campaign, though even that failed to spark any legitimate discussion of how ludicrous it all is. Yet, somehow, the network broadcasts never fail to show us the kickoff—once one of the most exciting plays in the game but now the most boring, with hardly a word about how silly the whole charade is or how easily it could be corrected by simply moving the kicker back another five yards.

It is both interesting and ironic that all of this is happening in a political environment where Trump is now returning to the White House, in large part because many Americans seemed to choose his peculiar brand of masculinity over the feminism of Kamala Harris and the modern Democratic Party. It seems odd that football, a sport once synonymous with manliness, appears to be undergoing a self-induced chemical castration, all while much of its core fan base of mostly non-liberals is simultaneously lashing out politically in some sort of last stand for America to retain at least one of our metaphorical testicles for as long as theoretically possible.

The masculinity aspect of the current debate over the future of football (one that has intermittently raged since the sport’s inception in the post-Civil War era) is best illustrated by the controversy over so-called “guardian caps.” The controversy bubbling just below the surface of this year’s NFL primary storylines involves the use of what amounts to a kind of bubble wrap for the helmet. The theory is that these incredibly ugly and awkward-looking helmet covers will cut down on concussions by providing extra protection. However, the science behind them is, at best, unsettled—making them a lot like the COVID mask.

An extra-padded “guardian helmet” worn by Cleveland Browns player Hassan Hall. (Wikimedia Commons) Several players have begun to wear guardian caps in games. Still, despite the sports media’s failed effort to shame Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa—who has suffered multiple concussions—into wearing one, the movement has yet to gain much momentum. If it eventually catches fire, much like the COVID mask did for mostly political reasons, it will mark, at least symbolically, the beginning of the end of tackle football.

To be clear, no one is advocating for football to be riskier for the purpose of quenching some sort of sick blood lust. However, reasonably regulated physicality is an essential part of this formerly great sport, one that has benefits for the development of young men all the way down to the high school level.

Once this part of the sport finally fades away, there will be no going back. Our society is way too soft now to ever condone a mainstream commercial endeavor (especially one that now openly appeals to ardent Taylor Swift fans) becoming significantly “less safe” on purpose. When this eventually happens, an important piece of what once made America unique will be lost forever.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Military/Veterans; Society; Sports
KEYWORDS: blmsycophants; flag; football; footballleague; helmet; national; sports
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To: Red Badger

Flag football in the 2028 olympics will be a joke. Bring back break dancing, at least I got a good laugh.....


41 posted on 02/03/2025 2:59:23 AM PST by Hot Tabasco
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To: Red Badger

Writer seems to advocate deadly and debilitating repeat concussions for professional football players because only that brand of football can make men of boys at the school level?


42 posted on 02/03/2025 2:59:55 AM PST by 9YearLurker
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To: Robert357

Via NIL, college athletes are getting paid so handsomely that some are delaying their progression to the “professional” ranks.


43 posted on 02/03/2025 3:01:03 AM PST by 9YearLurker
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To: Red Badger

ROAD HOUSE!


44 posted on 02/03/2025 3:05:23 AM PST by Rastus
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To: Red Badger

I read this article a week or two ago. What has been happening to football the last 15 or so years is disgusting. A bunch of us have called the targeting, launching and horse collar tackling rule changes the Pussification rules. Basically they will punish a Defensive player for simply hitting too hard. Many of the greatest plays in your school’s history would be penalties today. That’s just sad.

As an old Strong Safety I can tell you they’ve particularly made it impossible to play Safety in the modern game. A big part of your job as a Safety was to put the fear of god into any receiver who even considered crossing the middle. That’s no longer allowed. They also changed the definition of the “crown” of the helmet to be anything other than the facemask. It used to mean the top of the helmet.

All of this was done because a small self selected group (about 100) of longtime NFL players thought they had a problem with CTE. Turns out they did surprise surprise. The media then went hog wild and said this “proves” not only that every NFL player has this terrible risk of developing CTE but even college and high school players have this risk too. Evidence for such claims? Zero. How long have we had plastic helmets? Since about 1950. How many American boys have played high school football since then? Tens of millions. If players at that level had such a high risk of CTE that we needed to drastically change the rules of the game.....don’t you think we’d have seen it by now? Don’t you think we’d have seen millions of old men with CTE? After all, its been 75 years. Yet we’ve seen no such thing.


45 posted on 02/03/2025 3:12:42 AM PST by FLT-bird
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To: FamiliarFace
What we really need is to bring this back. This is football.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pep7oi-L_uA&t=15s

Though I won't hear it here, what the Leftist bedwetters respond with (because I've had these conversations multiple times) "boo hoo hoo you meanie! You just want to be entertained as a fan and you don't care if players are injured for your entertainment." To which I respond "BULLSHIT! I played for 8 years. I broke 3 fingers and 2 ribs. I had 3 concussions. I partially tore my hamstring. I had numerous other injuries the absolute worst of which was a sprained lower back (Jeezus that was awful). That's football. You know that if you play it is a metaphysical certainty you WILL get injured eventually. If you can't handle that.....DON'T PLAY. Nobody is forcing you. Just leave the game to the rest of us who actually have a working pair of balls OK nancy boy?"

46 posted on 02/03/2025 3:19:20 AM PST by FLT-bird
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To: Red Badger

I grew up on street where tackle football, without helmets or pads was the Game. our driveway was one endzone and our neighbors was the other end zone. In the 6 years i remember playing age 8 to 14 no one went to the hospital or had a broken bone. It wasn’t fun being the guy with the ball at the bottom of the pile, or getting tackled just as you were catching the ball, but it was part of the game. worst was getting tackled near the end zone, because the driveways were concrete and that meant you lost skin. if you were an older player, you only used enough force to stop the younger players. No cheap hits, and the rules were enforced. we had no refs, just honest players. there was an occasional fight, but the other kids would break it up quickly. Because playing the game and having fun was what it was about. Usually the game ended because someone’s mom called from the porch to git home for dinner, now. We learned that friendship was built on fairness, toughness, and fun. 60 years later, I’m still good friends with my old next door neighbor. We differ on politics, but that’s not important. We agree that fairness, honesty, and a level playing field with defined rules is what’s important. We learned that playing tackle football.


47 posted on 02/03/2025 3:22:56 AM PST by Waverunner
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To: Hot Tabasco
Bring back the Raygun!
48 posted on 02/03/2025 3:26:45 AM PST by Adder (End fascism...defeat all Democrats.)
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To: Adder

Article is right on but there’s more. Those ‘messages’ have a lot to do with the wussification. Think ‘End Racism/Choose Love.


49 posted on 02/03/2025 3:48:21 AM PST by DIRTYSECRET
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To: DIRTYSECRET

I definitely agree...


50 posted on 02/03/2025 3:51:48 AM PST by Adder (End fascism...defeat all Democrats.)
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To: Red Badger

Replace tackle football with Roman-style gladiatorial games ... use criminal illegals as a warmup for the main events.


51 posted on 02/03/2025 3:56:07 AM PST by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: Adder

Look at the ads during the Saturday games (college). Gone are the days of commercials marketing their products in a way that presents buying the product makes you more masculine. Now the men in the commercials are effeminate and stupid. The sideline reporterettes add a pantsuit mentality to the game.


52 posted on 02/03/2025 4:01:52 AM PST by Tell It Right (1 Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: 9YearLurker
Re: "Via NIL (Name, Image, Likeness), college athletes are getting paid so handsomely that some are delaying their progression to the professional ranks."

That would be very rare.

The lowest one year NFL contract will pay more than $800,000 in 2025.

First Round Draft choices get four years guaranteed.

Draft pick #1 in 2024 will get almost $40 million guaranteed.

Draft pick #32 in 2024 will get $12.4 million guaranteed.

53 posted on 02/03/2025 4:18:15 AM PST by zeestephen (Trump Landslide? Kamala lost the election by 230,000 votes, in WI, MI, and PA.)
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To: zeestephen

Things have progressed further still in the last year, but:

https://wgntv.com/news/is-nil-money-keeping-student-athletes-in-school-longer/


54 posted on 02/03/2025 4:29:16 AM PST by 9YearLurker
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To: toast

I played high school ball. Deviated nasal septum, sprained medial lateral knee ligament. Tried some more at junior college level. Didn’t get far and I quit. Felt bad about quitting but the writing was on the wall. Too small. Strong, quick and somewhat fast but when up against stronger, faster, taller guys who didn’t care about other things or have any other future, well I couldn’t fill that order. I decided that organized sports was not going to work for me. Decided to use the brain I had been given, and not wasted with the head on collisions and legal head slaps. Did well in school.
Football was good for discipline, teamwork, physical stamina, dealing with adversity, learning how to perform while in pain, etc. But bad for physical integrity, and a guard against choosing ridiculous goals like advancing a ball against a determined enemy. A rather unimportant matter.
The game is now a far cry from the game I played. Lineman are unbelievably fat. Young and strong enough to overcome obesity now...but those guys are gonna’ get DM2 and lots of skeletal probs and cardiovascular probs. if they stay overweight... Too commercial...really, the goals of the game are trivial and no one should really care if you’re “no.1” People forget real quick.
Sorry about the verbosity...and I am glad for you and your son’s. Freegards.


55 posted on 02/03/2025 4:46:57 AM PST by Getready (Wisdom is more valuable than gold and harder tro find. )
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To: Red Badger

I’m good with flag football. When they actually played with equipment it was the same thing. No one tackled, scores were high, and everyone had fun.

In saying that, if you want to get rid of football, let’s start with getting rid of rugby, soccer, and basketball.


56 posted on 02/03/2025 5:08:59 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz (Privatize the administrative state!)
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To: Red Badger
Meanwhile …

NHL player James Van Riemsdyk took a cross-check to the face the other night, lost four teeth in the process, went to the locker room for 30 stitches, and came out to finish the game. But that was just the start, as reported the next morning:

Van Riemsdyk received a post-game X-ray that revealed a piece of his tooth was stuck in his stitched-up lip. As a result, a stitch was taken out so the tooth could be removed, and then the lip was stitched back up. He had root canal and bone graft surgery after the game.

Oh — and he was back on the ice for the next game, two days later.

57 posted on 02/03/2025 5:15:10 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("Well, maybe I'm a little rough around the edges; inside a little hollow.” -- Tom Petty, “Rebels”)
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To: The Duke

LOL!!


58 posted on 02/03/2025 5:23:09 AM PST by OKSooner ("I'd be safe and warm, if I was in LA... " Mama Cass Elliott, 1966)
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To: Alberta's Child

59 posted on 02/03/2025 5:24:36 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger
Maybe they should go back to leather helmets. Seems like there wer fewer concussions back then...........

Literal death on the field during football games was quite a scandal in the nineteen-teens and twenties. The "movement" to ban football failed ... barely.

60 posted on 02/03/2025 5:33:13 AM PST by NorthMountain (... the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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