Thursday, September 27, 2012

Good News, Bad News

"What has two thumbs and always screws
up game-changing calls? THIS GUY."

Good News: the league reached an agreement with the officials last night.
Bad News: most of us have forgotten how mediocre the regular officials were, just because the replacement officials were completely inept at understanding basic NFL rules

Good News: the regular officials will make their return to the field in tonight's nationally-televised game.
Bad News: tonight's matchup features the Ravens and Browns, so everybody west of Ohio won't give a damn.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Big Problems Just Got Much, Much Bigger

We all saw the disaster at the end of the Packers-Seahawks game last night. The replacement officials are destroying the credibility of the NFL while creating an unwatchable on-field product at the same time.

For several weeks, the typical media response to the sorry state of officiating has been "thank goodness it didn't affect the outcome of the game(s)." Of course, that was a load of BS - bad calls were affecting nearly EVERY game; they just hadn't happened at the END of a close game to decide the final score.

Until last night.

It had to happen at some point; that it occurred during a nationally-televised (and highly-watched) broadcast was poetic justice. The league can't hide from this, can't sweep it under the rug, can't pretend it didn't alter the result of the game. Everybody saw it. Everybody knows.

Naturally, the league itself is taking most of the heat for this situation. Many feel that the replacement officials aren't really to blame - they're in over their heads. However, the replacements should share as much of the guilt as the league because they willingly signed up for this, arrogantly thinking that they were qualified to officiate an NFL game after working in the lower ranks of collegiate and high school football levels. They decided to become scabs and grab a little glory.

Well, now you have your glory and everybody can watch you on TV for the next 48 hours. Congratulations, scabs.

The league is in shambles this morning, all because of a financial dispute that's less than the total revenue generated during one Super Bowl commercial break. This is a crappy week for all NFL fans, but if you are a schadenfreude fan, Christmas just came three months early.

Monday, September 24, 2012

Perspective, Power Rankings and Big Problems

Yesterday's decisive loss to the Vikings wasn't expected - if the Niners are going to compete for a Super Bowl title, they'll need to start beating up on inferior road opponents with relative ease. However, considering yesterday's outbreak of upsets throughout the league, the "trap game" factor and the Metrodome always being a house of horrors for the 49ers, I'm not ready to make any pronouncements about San Francisco's supposed slip into mediocrity.

It's just one game - every team gets a couple of mulligans throughout the year, and an early-season stumble on the road isn't going to determine the course of the 2012 campaign. Super Bowls aren't won in September. Hell, they aren't even won in January anymore.

Did the 49ers look like crap in all three facets of the game? Absolutely. But a victory over the overhyped, loud-mouthed, playoff-choking Jets next Sunday will quickly erase the memories of yesterday's bed-wetting performance in Minneapolis.

As a result of yesterday's debacle, I'm sure the 49ers will fall several spots in this week's power rankings. And that's troubling. Not because of the Niners slipping in the rankings, but because there are actually "official" AP rankings in the first place. Last I checked, the NFL has a very fair and competitive playoff system - we don't need polls to let us know who is "Number One" because the postseason will determine that. These rankings are another transparent attempt by the sports media of creating a story instead of reporting it. The tendency for the media to overreact with every win and loss, especially early in the season, renders any power rankings as a completely worthless exercise, designed only to feed the 24/7 news cycle prior to the following week's Thursday night contest.

But giving any weight or credence to meaningless power rankings pales in comparison to the league's biggest (and most painfully obvious) issue, the completely inept replacement officials. Last week, Steve Young cited the league's inelastic demand as the reason the NFL isn't concerned with getting a new deal in place with the real officials. Viewers will tune in to every game, regardless of the product they are seeing on the field. And up until yesterday, that was certainly the case in my household.

But midway through the 4th quarter of the Vikings game, we decided to leave the house and run some Sunday errands. No biggie - the game's outcome wasn't really in doubt, and we figured we could knock out a few quick chores before settling in for the afternoon's contests. But a funny thing happened when we got home: the TVs stayed off. Instead, we listened to the (NL West Champion) San Francisco Giants game on the radio while cleaning up the garage. We'd rather listen to a ballgame than watch another football game, wondering after every play if a flag would be incorrectly thrown or an infraction was missed or improperly identified.

Quite simply, the brand of football that we are seeing on NFL Sundays (along with Thursdays and Mondays) has suffered to the point of being unreliable and baseless. And that leads to Roger Goodell's biggest problem - it's unwatchable. It's fake. It's phony. The trust is gone and the lunatics are running the asylum. Rather than improving from week to week, it only gets worse.

A league that prides itself in the integrity of the game has become a complete joke, all because of a few dollars in the pension fund for part-time employees. Until this issue is fixed, the NFL will continue to lose credibility and, eventually, viewers (money).

But hey, in the meantime, it's still baseball season!

Monday, September 10, 2012

Coda (?)

What more can I say?

I thought about picking things up again once the season started, and I was preparing a few choice words for yesterday's officiating crew, but the Niners managed to overcome a bunch of questionable calls to manhandle the Packers in a not-as-close-as-the-final-score-indicated 30-22 beatdown in Green Bay. THAT'S how you start a season filled with high expectations.

Alex Smith tossed a pair of touchdowns - one to Randy Moss, naturally. Frank Gore ripped through the Packers' defense for another 100-yard effort. The defense dominated Aaron Rodgers and the rest of Green Bay's high-powered offense. Oh yeah - and David Akers kicked an NFL-record 63-yard field goal. Yep, just another week for the 49ers.

You start expecting this stuff to happen. You think back to the last time you counted on the 49ers to win each week, regardless of the opponent or location. You think of Montana. Walsh. Young. Rice. Lott. You think that, somehow, the fortunes of this franchise have done a complete 180 in a year and a half.

The Niners are really, really good, with an excellent chance of becoming great. The new stadium is no longer a pipe dream, but a reality, being built right now about three miles away from me as I type this post. In Harbaugh we trust.

What more can I say?

I started this blog to chronicle my dissatisfaction with the 49ers' organization. High ticket prices. Crappy stadium. Terrible on-field performances. Bad decisions made in the front office.

I was done giving them my money. Done dragging my ass up to decrepit Candlestick Park to waste half of my weekend. Done hearing all of the double-talk and rhetoric from inept coaches and team officials. Done waiting 'til next year.

Now, the Niners don't have my money (football on a big high-def TV is a wonderful thing). Candlestick Park will be empty in two years as the team completes its trek to my backyard in the south bay. Trent Baalke and Jim Harbaugh are calling the shots while leading the 49ers back to the top. Hell, even Lil' Jed is taking care of business.

What's left to complain about?

What more can I say?