You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Culture Wars
Confidential Meeting Reveals NFL Owners' Fear of Donald Trump
2018-04-30
[PJMedia] It hasn't been a banner year for the NFL. In fact, it's been a bad year for Roger Goodell and company. This past October, league officials, players, and owners met to discuss the growing problems within the league, specifically players kneeling during the National Anthem. An audio recording of that meeting obtained by the New York Times reveals that the mounting pressure put on the NFL by President Donald Trump has had an effect.

At the start of the meeting, NFL Commissioner Goodell implored everyone in attendance to keep the contents of the meeting a secret. In the technology age, he was tilting at windmills. Of course, the meeting was recorded and the tape leaked.

The NYT explains that as the meeting began,

The players sounded aggrieved. After discussing a proposal to finance nonprofit groups to address player concerns, they wanted to talk about why Colin Kaepernick, the quarterback who started the anthem protests to highlight social injustice and police brutality against African-Americans, was, they believed, being blackballed by the owners. The owners sounded panicked about their business under attack, and wanted to focus on damage control.

With slumping TV ratings, the owners realized what the players have the luxury of ignoring -- all of the protesting and the connection to SJW causes was killing the goose that had laid everyone in that room's golden egg. Owner of the New England Patriots Robert Kraft put his finger on the problem as he spoke about the players kneeling during the National Anthem, "[W]e have a president who will use that as fodder to do his mission."

Kraft was speaking for the owners as a group, because as the NYT points out,

The owners were intent on finding a way to avoid Trump’s continued criticism. The president’s persistent jabs on Twitter had turned many fans against the league. Lurie, who called Trump’s presidency "disastrous," cautioned against players getting drawn into the president’s tactics.

"We’ve got to be careful not to be baited by Trump or whomever else," Lurie said. "We have to find a way to not be divided and not get baited."

The Buffalo Bills owner Terry Pegula sounded anguished over the uncertainty of when Trump would take another shot at the league. "All Donald needs to do is to start to do this again," Pegula said. "We need some kind of immediate plan because of what’s going on in society. All of us now, we need to put a Band-Aid on what’s going on in the country."

Throughout the meeting the NFL owners kept reiterating the need to protect the bottom line and that the protests were hurting attendance and TV ratings. Boycotts and angry sponsors were new headaches for the owners. President Trump's tweeting about the NFL had stirred up his base and was threatening the growth of the NFL.

After the meeting was over, the players and owners released a joint statement insisting that the meeting was productive and that everything was fine with the NFL. Except the recording reveals a group of players oblivious to the damage their virtue signaling was doing to the league and a group of owners all too aware of the damage being done to their bottom line by President Trump.
Too little, too late. Red America, the place where the vast majority of your viewers are have seen your character, and they don't like it. Younger people are not watching the NFL like they used to, so when you have fully pissed off the 30-60 crowd you will be left with few viewers and empty stadiums (more than what you have now) and no one willing to give you tax breaks for new stadiums.

Enjoy the bed of bankruptcy you have made for yourselves.

In summary: play stupid politics, lose.
Posted by:DarthVader

#22   Couple of points:
The Kaepernick crap started while Obama was in office. Owners could if addressed before it got out of hand. That is a mistake that Trump highlighted.

The SJW have taken their message to sports fans because that is where the audience was. Only the converted watch the main stream media. The SJW elite decided to send their message to sports fans and they would rather not watch. Again a mistake in the owners and elites.

The owners even resigned the commissioner at 50 mil a year. Yet another mistake.

Let the league rot.

Posted by: Airandee   2018-04-30 16:34  

#21  I haven't watched pro football in a long time. Got tired of the end zone dances, the look-at-me-after a good catch. It wasn't fun any more. I still like to watch college.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2018-04-30 14:42  

#20  Along the lines of what Bright Pebbles said, I'd like to see the Congress look into the NFL's special tax status.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2018-04-30 12:17  

#19  How many NFL stars would last a month in Sierra Leone or Chad?
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-04-30 11:31  

#18  BTW, it wasn't Trump's tweets that made me stop watching football. It was Colin Kapernick and Marshawn Lynch. Trump only tweeted what I already thought.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2018-04-30 11:03  

#17  Yeah, I get that. A fellow can dream, at any rate...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-04-30 11:00  

#16  M. Murcek
Neo Marxism is ALL about doing EXACTLY that.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2018-04-30 10:57  

#15  Any city that milks its taxpayers to give money to billionaire owners should cede all rights to have their voters eligible in all state and national elections. You can't vote to send middle class money to billionaires one minute and then vote for Marxists to run the country the next. Yeah, like they'll go for that...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-04-30 10:43  

#14  rjshwarz, what I would like is that the city paying for the new stadium with public funds, from the taxpayer's pockets, require that the Team Owners sign over the Team Name and Logos. If the Baltimore Colts want to move, for example, then "Fine, it's a free country, but you have to change your name, logos, uniform, the works...How does the Indy Ink-Spots grab you?"
Posted by: magpie   2018-04-30 10:39  

#13  It'll be interesting to see what happens the next time a team tries to get a city to pay for their new stadium.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2018-04-30 10:14  

#12  All these people should be told "If you want to sermonize, go get ordained. Then get a congregation. Then give your sermon to them. Leave me clean out of the loop."
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-04-30 09:53  

#11  Color Commentary about the Inner Urban Poor, Gun Violence, Spousal Abuse, Global Warming, or even If Public Schools should have Sodas or Not... I. Don't. Care. I am here to watch Football, not be bombarded by some twit's latest cause du jour. As far as I am concerned they are stealing the one thing that we all can't spare: my personal time.
Posted by: magpie   2018-04-30 09:39  

#10  I wouldn't hire Steven A-hole Smith to scoop manure with his tongue, even though that is his stock-in-trade already...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-04-30 09:30  

#9  If anyone sees Smith's CV floating around, please ring me up. Grounds keeping positions are picking up around here. He should be informed.
Posted by: Besoeker   2018-04-30 08:25  

#8  Goody Goodell and his trained seals are afraid of the wrong thing. The fact that he was booed by fans at the Draft as long as he was on stage even though he was with two FB stars ought to be what has them all concerned.
Posted by: Mercutio   2018-04-30 08:22  

#7  Trump should see about banning taxpayers subsidising sports (including effective subsidies via treating it differently from other activities).
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2018-04-30 08:20  

#6  What's funny about all of this - all Goodell had to do to nip this in the bud was instruct the owners to tell the players - 'You want to protest? Do it on your own time, not ours.'
Posted by: Raj   2018-04-30 07:11  

#5  Yeah, speaking of the commentary, I wonder how much Bob Costas' nattering can be traced back as a precursor of the whole kneeling thing. The players, and now - in damage control mode - the league, are saying "our thing is a bigger deal than yours." Not so much, actually, they are now finding out...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2018-04-30 05:05  

#4  Too much color commentary. Too many, Way, way, WAY too many commercial breaks. Too many spoiled athletes, some should be in jail but aren't, and the sportscasters seem to hate the normal ones...
It's getting harder and harder to care enough to watch.
Posted by: magpie   2018-04-30 03:40  

#3  Take your weed, hoodies, rap music, and the bad habit of leaving your children fatherless and your games back to Kenya.
Posted by: Omeger Gray6606   2018-04-30 01:15  

#2  Well said Herb.
Posted by: Besoeker   2018-04-30 01:00  

#1  Kaepernick killed the NFL for me. The first year, even before his protest was copied by all the other players. It was a big "FUCK YOU" to fans like me, and I got the message loud and clear. You hate us. You hold us responsible for all your problems, and you will happily divide us into warring camps who can't even agree on things like "We are all Americans here". So be it.

Now I'm just someone who used to watch football. And I'm OK with that.
Posted by: Herb McCoy   2018-04-30 00:58  

00:00