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| By Jeff Sherman OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer Photography by csmfoundation.org E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Jeff Sherman |
| Published Oct. 22, 2009 at 10:19 a.m. |
|
I like watching football, but it's far from my favorite sport. There's the groundwork. Now, on to the guts of this blog.
American football really has it all. It's fast, full of destruction, precision and, at any moment, you know someone is liable to get whacked, flattened and downright leveled. Ah, football. Many games are more like video games or movies, aren't they? Huge guys, in full armor, going all out in search of a win.
What's got football on this basketball boy's mind today?
Malcolm Gladwell, author of "Blink" and "The Tipping Point," is the one who has me thinking. Gladwell has written one of the year's best pieces of sports journalism. His New Yorker piece called, "Offensive Play. How different are dog fighting and football?," is as good as it gets in his profession. It's thought provoking, honest and entertaining. Give it a read.
Here's an exerpt:
"In 2000 and 2001, four drivers in NASCAR's elite Sprint Cup Series were killed in crashes, including the legendary Dale Earnhardt. In response, NASCAR mandated stronger seats, better seat belts and harnesses, and ignition kill switches, and completed the installation of expensive new barriers on the walls of its racetracks, which can absorb the force of a crash much better than concrete. The result is that, in the past eight years, no one has died in NASCAR's three national racing series. Stock-car fans are sometimes caricatured as bloodthirsty, eagerly awaiting the next spectacular crash. But there is little blood these days in NASCAR crashes. Last year, at Texas Motor Speedway, Michael McDowell hit an oil slick, slammed head first into the wall at a hundred and eighty miles per hour, flipped over and over, leaving much of his car in pieces on the track, and, when the vehicle finally came to a stop, crawled out of the wreckage and walked away. He raced again the next day. So what is football? Is it dog fighting or is it stock-car racing?"
I never played the game at any thing above a flag football level, but even so I'm certain that even with all the precautions taken to protect players that I wouldn't want my son or frankly your son to play the game. Call me a wuss or risk averse, but I'm simply doing the concussion and brain damage math. Again, read the piece, do some research on concussions and on post-playing-days life for football players and you, too, might be a bit scared.
I'm not bashing football. Again, I'm a fan. But, I am wondering if the sport may need to pay more attention to safety.
But, as Gladwell concludes in his 10-page piece, "There is nothing else to be done, not so long as fans stand and cheer. We are in love with football players, with their courage and grit, and nothing else -- neither considerations of science nor those of morality -- can compete with the destructive power of that love."
Is football too violent? Use the Talkback feature to react.
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5 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by sandstorm on Oct. 23, 2009 at 2:05 p.m. (report)
broner is right and quite frankly i thought the New Yorker published articles better thought out than this weak attempt to point that, duh, football is violent.
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Posted by LegallyBlonde on Oct. 22, 2009 at 3:05 p.m. (report)
I was at that game where Freeman got smacked. Also the same game where Green ripped off a 98-yard run and the Vikings blew it on 4th and 28. Vikings still suck. Looking forward to reading this piece.
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Posted by speakthetruth on Oct. 22, 2009 at 2:29 p.m. (report)
Soccer is not a sport, it is an athletic event that is roughly as exciting as watching paint dry. Football is a brutal, violent sport...but no one is "forced" to play football. Players understand the risks.
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Posted by wiscoleeds on Oct. 22, 2009 at 11:39 a.m. (report)
Take off the pads and helmet and you won't see so many "macho" hits where someone just blindsides someone. Perhaps these "studs" should try playing rugby or Aussie rules football. Until the mentality that smacking an unsuspecting reciever coming across the middle is cool and not the equivalent of a cowardly sucker punch and the participants are more armored than our fighting soldiers in Afghanistan then football will continue to have concussions. Wiscoleeds
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Posted by Broner on Oct. 22, 2009 at 10:34 a.m. (report)
Football certainly is violent and becoming moreso with bigger, faster, stronger athletes. But the big difference between dog fighting and football is that the losing football players don't die on the field and if they don't die aren't left for dead or outright killed by their owners afterwards. Plus, football players especially at the college and professional levels make the decision to play of their own free will. The risks and rewards are known and those who take the risk to potentially get the reward make their own decisions. And those who do play don't spend their lives chained up, living in their own feces, and ultimately killed by their competition or owners when they've outlived their "fight."
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