Quote:
Originally Posted by Ruhskins
It kills me how much fans support the owners.
|
I don't get it either, but I pass it off as them being completely ignorant. The other killer thing is how people want to keep saying "Well, if i went to my boss and asked him to show me his books. I'd be fired!" Of course you would, but that's only because you are expendable and easily replaceable. They on the other hand are not.
Don't relate your employment situation to theirs. There are only 1696 NFL (excluding practice squad) players in the world. THE WORLD!! I imagine I can find that many of (fill in your job title) in a single state, never the less the world.
They are in the NFL for a reason, they are the best of the best and can't be replaced. What they can do cannot be duplicated. You on the other hand can be. You can train any monkey to be a fireman, policeman, teacher, doctor, but you can't do the same to replace a Peyton Manning or Tom Brady. They are just like Aerosmith, Kanye West, Jack Nicholas, Tom Cruise, or Lady Gaga. They are unique talents that aren't replaceable at the current moment.
What does that mean? Still don't get it? Let me explain it to you this way. Let's say a person like Pavarotti (i know he's dead) played at the particular Opera house. His talent couldn't be duplicated, and people lined up around the block to get tickets to this hot item. Now Pavarotti and the Opera house owner came to a mutual agreement on compensation, but then after a couple years, the Opera house owner tells Pavarotti that the arrangement doesn't work for him. He claims his profits have declined over the past years even though his income has increase annually. He tells Pavarotti he's going to close the Opera house unless he decides to take less. Now Pavarotti is a fair man so he asks to see the numbers. The Opera house owner declines and says that he needs to trust him. Now think about this. Those people aren't there for the Opera house, they are there for Pavarotti. That whole business has been built off and thrives because of the talent that Pavarotti provides.
Moral: They can ask to see the books because their talent isn't replaceable and has made men BILLIONAIRES (that seemingly want more). You on the other hand cannot because you are a dime a dozen when it comes to the job market. Sorry guys, but that's just the way it is.
Reminder:
1) Owners opted out of this deal, NOT the players.
2) Owners have been positioning themselves for a lockout for years. (trying to exempt themselves from Monopoly rules via Supreme Court, brokering TV contracts with a lockout payment clause)
3) Refuse to show books claiming profit loss over the past years and wants the players to "trust them" on the numbers. (mind you, this profit loss could be from making 300 million one year to 299 million the following.)
You do the math. Big business and greedy corporations are ruining this country. Now, they threaten the status of professional football. The good news is, if the NFL ever folded, you can rest assure there are other investors that would take less to see it operate. After all, rich is rich.