Posted on 01/02/2014 6:22:09 AM PST by Whats-wrong-with-the-truth
It would be a tremendous embarrassment to the league to have three of four playoff games blacked out locally, and likely, the tickets will get sold somehow to avoid that scenario. But there's a bigger issue here. Is this the most stark example that NFL fans aren't too excited to go to games anymore?
(Excerpt) Read more at sports.yahoo.com ...
...or simply be a Lions fan...and never have to worry about such things.
Back in the day you could bring a keg into the games at the Rockpile in Buffalo, I know because we did it. Of course after one game the kicker (Booth Lustig I think) got mugged by the fans for missing a kick that would have won the game! But hey, everyone had a good time for sure.
The NFL adapts to changing times. That's it's biggest assest.
Someone did a study and found that in an entire 4-quarter game, there is only 6-7 minutes of real “action” of plays.
Compare that to 3 periods/60 mins of hockey where action and play is constant while clock is running.
Horse racing was pretty popular in the 1950s when I was a kid.
In many locales it was the only place you could gamble legally.
Green Bay played 7 games without it’s starting QB . Chicago and Detroit choked. Why not Green Bay ?
Then you haven’t seen the ice fisherman out on Green Bay.
Maybe. As I noted before, the NFL has a dumb TV policy and has been slow to embrace the Internet. Why does the NFL insist on making it difficult for its fans to watch its product? The NFL and local TV stations force feed fans the games that they want you to watch, regardless of whether the fans in that area have any interest in them. So far, this hasn't hurt the NFL, but it could in the future--or, perhaps worse, there is no way to know--why doesn't the NFL try to reach a bigger audience by letting people choose what games they want to watch?
Talk about adapts to changing times; compare MLB and NFL in watching games on the Internet. If I want to watch MLB games on the Internet, I can buy the MLB.TV package for about $125, and I don't need to be a subscriber to any cable company. Through that package, I can watch every out-of-market game on my TV, iPad, smartphone, and computer, live and in HD, and all with multiple camera angles. The cost is about $0.02 per game.
With the NFL, if I want to watch a game on the Internet, I first have to subscribe to DirecTv. Then, I have to buy the Sunday Ticket--but not ordinary Sunday Ticket, but Sunday Ticket MAX, which is extra--the total is $330, a total of about $0.65 per game, not counting the cost of DirecTv.
Why does the NFL insist on making it hard (and expensive) for its fans to watch its games?
Yeah, I know what you mean about the corporate atmosphere that’s the NFL.
And 20-30 thousand in that stadium looks like the cleaning crew ..not like the Dan Marino days.
You're right. Look at what NBC is doing with the English Premier League. Yes, you need NBC Sports Network to watch the games on live television but every other game in the league is streamed, free, on their website. Their coverage happens to be superb so it's really a can't-miss proposition.
Another reason why the Premier League is my league of choice to follow, now.
The funny thing, even people in England can’t get all the games like we can.
I realize that both are in the AFC. When/if they p[lay each other, THAT will be the biggest game, euphemistically the super bowl. When the winner of the NFC plays the winner of the AQFC (I am hoping for Green Bay v Denver, for the quarterback shootout), that will be an ‘also ran’ game.
I have all three channels for soccer (FSP, BeIn and NBCSN) and for wire to wire coverage the Premier League can’t be beaten. I do wish the NFL would do that, primarily because I’d love to not have to watch the Packers when they are forced down my throat (yes, I must admit to being a Viking fan).
The Seattle Seahawks play-off game, one in which they do not even know who they will be playing, sold out in 26 minutes.
I think it’s more a reflection of the markets in the cities whose teams are in the playoffs. Is even one major media market town’s team in this year’s playoffs?
Since they treated Rush Limbaugh so poorly, I’ve lost all interest in the NFL and am fine with seeing them have these problems.
I’ve always thought the games would be worth the price if the losing team in any game was flogged. It would make for an exciting and “skin in the game” game.
I’m sorry, you are mistaken.
Denver is an AFC team.
Seattle is an NFC team.
They are the two favorite teams to end up in the Superbowl.
That’s the thing. DirectTV pays billions so they can dictate how NFL games are programmed. The money in NFL is in gambling and fantasy football. So DirecTV came up with the RedZone channel. I know people who have gotten DirecTV simply for that one channel. It’s genius. Baseball has to give its product away because people don’t care nearly as much anymore. The NFL can dictate its terms because people will pay for the privilege of watching it. And hey, if it’s blacked out, just go to a bar with satellite and watch it there. Still nicer and cheaper than the stadium experience nowadays.
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