I confess I’ve never understood the length, breadth, and brutality of the NFL preseason. With athletes in all sports — including intercollegiate ones — now training year-round, the practice by pro football of spending a month-and-a-half-plus in helmets and pads, beating each other’s brains out, out in summer’s worst heat, strikes me as nothing short of insane.
The topic is salient as the Redskins, already underwhelming most observers with their 2008 prospects, and guided by a new coach who’s never coached before — (they may well finish last in their division) — lost one of their most important players on defense on the very first play of practice on the very first day of training camp yesterday. For the season. Later in the day, they lost another defensive end, also for the season, a reserve, who ruptured his achilles tendon. One might be inclined to chalk this up to really bad luck, except that as NFL preseasons have lengthened and intensified most especially in the last 10 years, as players once sized for the defensive line now roam at safety, and as linebackers now run not much slower than wideouts, the triage has multiplied. More NFL players, including front-liners, are certain to go down over the next six weeks — they always do. And the NFL doesn’t care.
In a very real sense contemporary pro football has become a game of brutal attrition. It’s positively preposterous to try and forecast a season ahead before first figuring out who survives all the way through August.
Phillip Daniels is a 12-year NFL veteran. In taking reps (well, one, anyway) yesterday with the ‘Skins, he was preparing for a season opener more than 45 days away. What in the world are the Redskins — and the rest of the NFL — doing scheduling such stress and duress?
I’m not the only one wondering about this madness.
Indicting the sport most might be its collegiate counterpart: without a single “preseason” game the NCAA pigskinners seem to open up with high-value heart-stoppers each and every Labor Day weekend. Consider too that unlike the collegians, NFLers have no limit on the amount of hours they can put in in a week training, studying film, and participating in offseason “mini-camps” and “voluntary workouts,” which of course are voluntary in name only. I think the Redskins have about a half dozen of those throughout the calendar now. By virtue of the commitment NFLers make around the calendar to their profession, there’s just no defense for the prolonged training camps of today.
One of the reasons the camp injuries are as dire as they annually are is because the camps are contested in extreme conditions — high heat and humidity. You also now have hundreds of three-hundred-plus-pounders competing in them, and you don’t have to be a cardiologist to know that those folks generally don’t prosper exercising in extreme heat. With their heads encased in oven-like shells.
Once upon a time, the NFL started training camps in August, conducted its season, which ended in January, and then spent late winter and spring and early summer healing up. And the football played then was rather good; some, like me, thought it better than today’s.
Today there is no offseason, in the NFL or really in any other sport, so why start the head-bashing, knee-destroying, and tendon-rupturing while embers from the 4th of July are still aglow?
All teams play a minimum of four preseason games, and starters are expected to play nearly a half of each game because . . . teams charge regular season prices for the ghoulish meat grinder-slaughterfests. I don’t doubt that a healthy majority of NFL clubs have lobbied the league office over the years to try and get the preseason shortened — motivated by a basic sense of survival. But now we’re getting to the heart of the matter: season tickets owners in Washington don’t have the option of not spending hundreds more on the meaningless slate of exhibitions. And the hundreds more on parking.
And always the games are atrocious to watch. Even if you hate baseball you should watch it instead of the NFL’s July and August dreck.
I’m not ignorant about football players needing their “reps.” And I realize that a handful of rookies need to be evaluated in game-like situations. But given the gazillions the NFL spends evaluating college players year-round, and in combines and such, you can’t make the argument that teams need half a summer to evaluate their new personnel. Or that grizzled vets need months’ worth of reps in triple-digit temps.
The NHL with its preseason has actually taken an alternative strategy with that of the NFL, and shortened it in recent years. Teams will commence camp in mid-September and have just three weeks of training and exhibitions before the arrival of opening week. Talk to any NHL manager and he’ll tell you that his players will show up in mid-September in shape and ready to skate. We can quibble over whether the preseason should extend more than 5 games, but it’s clear that the NHL, unlike the NFL, isn’t motivated by negligent and malicious greed, for hardly anyone attends NHL exhibition games. And by virtue of having a viable feeder development league in the ‘A,’ with annual promotions for virtually every club from it, hockey’s exhibitions are defensible events as auditions of the up-and coming.
Moreover, hockey clubs aren’t obligated to dress their stars — Ovechkin might skate two of the September games, for instance.
It’s really striking when you consider how relatively blessed the NHL is when it comes to being able to dress, durably, its stars from opening night on through the postseason. It’s a fierce and rugged sport to be sure, but it’s managed by men who care about the welfare of their charges and enact training schedules to protect them.
















































7 Comments
But this is the we-can-do-no-wrong REDSKINS man! They could end the year 0-16 and still get ridiculous amounts of local media coverage.
John, Have you heard that your buddy Alan May will be an assistant coach in the AHL. It is believed he will be announced as the assistant coach in Norfolk to former Bear Darren Rumble. The news conference is scheduled for tomorrow.
You addressed the real reason why the NFL still has 4 preseason games. Money. No if and’s or buts, money is the only reason why they have preseason games; In ALL major sports its for the money.
You have to have at least 4 because this way every team is guaranteed 10 homes games. That’s 2 additional big revenue days.
Now factor in that NO player gets ‘paid’ for a preseason game, its an even bigger pay day for the owners. The player will get a roster bonus if they make the team, but only get paid if they make the weekly roster. So most the risk is on the players.
(On a side note P&B its arguable to call Daniels ‘one of the most important players’ as he only had 2.5 more sacks then you or I had last year; and neither of us played a down.)
The NFL will not change there preseason stance, until the NFLPA demand they do something about it.
The NHL (even the NBA) makes STH’s buy the preseason games as well. But purchasing tickets at $20 for 2/3 games is a lot better then $75 a pop 2 meaningless games.
College football you don’t buy ‘preseason’ games, but you buy the ‘cupcake’ games. Who wants to watch Furman or Richmond play a D1 school? Nobody does (believe me I’ve seen them both play), but you’ve got to pay the bills, so you schedule cupcakes. Same with college basketball.
Its the business side of sports. Yes it would be great if every game were a rivalry and meant something, but the reality is, you’ve got to watch the bottom $.
If teams were losing money by playing preseason games; then we wouldn’t have them to begin with.
“…it’s clear that the NHL, unlike the NFL, isn’t motivated by negligent and malicious greed, for hardly anyone attends NHL exhibition games.”
I don’t think the NHL is any less greedy than the NFL, or MLB, or the NBA. And the NFL isn’t any more negligent in the treatment of their players than the NHL, which you may recall has a small problem with concussions which it essentially ignores. As far as pre-season games go, the very fact that nobody attends the NHL pre-season games makes it much easier to cancel them. If the NHL depended on those games for revenue the way NFL teams do you wouldn’t see the pre-season shortened so easily. Actually, you wouldn’t see it shortened at all.
That said, you’re absolutely correct that the NFL pre-season’s length and timing are ridiculous.
I dont give a rats ass about the NFL or thier decissions but i am concerned that we dont have enough defense lined up on the CAPS. Pothier is not going to play until the halfway mark if he plays at all. If he does play he will be worried about taking another it and he will be hunted by the thugs so who is replacing him. And what the hell is Morrisons issue? WHo would not give thier left nut to be a part of this team?
The Redskins were not even in full pads yet so Daniel’s injury is just one of those things that happens. Football is just brutal on body. Probably would be a good thing to have no starter play in the preseason and don’t reduce the roster as the preseason goes on like it does, IMO.
I followed the NFL religiously for 41 years. I had been a season ticket holder for an NFL franchise for 27 years. I understand that game very well. For the life of me, I could never understand the length of the pre-season. It is, however, a money-maker for many towns, particularly in Wisconsin where several teams train.
I gave up the NFL, cold turkey, in November 2006 for the NHL and have been a Caps STH since. I wish that I understood hockey as well as football. The NHL has a more sane approach to the pre-season. They rely on their athletes to report in peak physical condition. There is no need to grind them down for a solid month before the season. Your report is accurate. NFL pre-season is ridiculous. It’s all about making more money for the franchises, towns, etc.
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