argh! said:twenty years. that is my guess for how much longer pro football will be profitable. after that, liquidation.
regardless of whether you agree with me, do you think college football depends on pro football to be meaningful(bqm)
RobGriz said:argh! said:twenty years. that is my guess for how much longer pro football will be profitable. after that, liquidation.
regardless of whether you agree with me, do you think college football depends on pro football to be meaningful(bqm)
Please explain your hypothesis. Not disagreeing necessarily, just want to hear your reasoning
argh! said:RobGriz said:argh! said:twenty years. that is my guess for how much longer pro football will be profitable. after that, liquidation.
regardless of whether you agree with me, do you think college football depends on pro football to be meaningful(bqm)
Please explain your hypothesis. Not disagreeing necessarily, just want to hear your reasoning
head injuries, globalization, and an aging fan base are the biggest factors, in my view.
as for head injuries, it was a good game, but the head shot that new england player took was a brutal reminder of why football is losing popularity. do we really want to cheer on while young men do long-term damage to their brains(bqm)
as for an aging fan base and globalization, the world is getting smaller, and there are a lot more things to attract our attention, especially those who don't really care to stay stuck in the pastimes of the... past, i.e. young people. it ain't 1975 and it ain't ever going to be 1975 again, no matter how many old men want it to be.
horribilisfan8184 said:argh! said:RobGriz said:argh! said:twenty years. that is my guess for how much longer pro football will be profitable. after that, liquidation.
regardless of whether you agree with me, do you think college football depends on pro football to be meaningful(bqm)
Please explain your hypothesis. Not disagreeing necessarily, just want to hear your reasoning
head injuries, globalization, and an aging fan base are the biggest factors, in my view.
as for head injuries, it was a good game, but the head shot that new england player took was a brutal reminder of why football is losing popularity. do we really want to cheer on while young men do long-term damage to their brains(bqm)
as for an aging fan base and globalization, the world is getting smaller, and there are a lot more things to attract our attention, especially those who don't really care to stay stuck in the pastimes of the... past, i.e. young people. it ain't 1975 and it ain't ever going to be 1975 again, no matter how many old men want it to be.
The masses will watch, no clamor for, Gladiators until the end of time. The spectacle may change but the underlying human motivation and desire won't. Eventually the tide will turn against the snowflake nanny state culture. There's a reason why throughout history, whether they are seen as good guys or bad guys, the barbarians always prevail.
rail43boy said:Sounds like none of you watch boxing or mma. They still seem more brutal to me than football. But it's just 1 on 1 - and they have no protection... well they do have a mouthpiece. I think those "sports" are pretty popular, I watch but prefer team sports.