NFL HELL: Owners/TV networks face mounting losses as Trump called boycotts spread

[h=1]Marshawn Lynch Stands Only For Mexican National Anthem[/h]
[h=4]Afro-Mexicans are treated like garbage and subject to extreme, racist violence in Mexico. Lynch has no problem standing for their national anthem.[/h]As I said, this is purely about hating America.


More at: https://www.infowars.com/marshawn-lynch-stands-only-for-mexican-national-anthem/

I wasn't sure where to post this but I came across something outrageous last week. I was investing the Charlottesville incident and I found an article that said the UN was registering some kind of civil rights warnings/complaints against Trump and his comments following the ramming incident. So just out of curiosity I looked to see what the UN was saying about the atrocities against white farmers in Zimbabwe. The UN did list a few formal complaints against Zimbabwe, for not taking the land fast enough from the white farmers and giving it to the black people! Can you believe that?
 
The incredible over complication of the rules is the bigger problem in my opinion. There's so many subjective penalties and they are so severe that I'd say maybe 30% of who won or lost the game is altered by bad calls.
And considering how many people bet money on these games, it’s no wonder more people aren’t boycotting.

I remember the made up rule that cost me $2,500 well. It’s what pissed me off enough to boycott the NFL. Some seven years later and it’s only gotten absurd.
 
Final figures 2017 vs 2016 (Hosting team attendance summation)
2017 17,253,425
2016 17,788,671
Diff -535,246 (-3%)

Top five losers:
[table="width: 400, align: left"]
[tr][td]Team[/td][td]2017[/td][td]2016[/td][td]Diff[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Los Angeles Chargers[/td][td]202,687[/td][td]456,197[/td][td]-253,510[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Los Angeles Rams[/td][td]507,136[/td][td]665,318[/td][td]-158,182[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Cincinnati Bengals[/td][td]425,937[/td][td]508,071[/td][td]-82,134[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Washington Redskins[/td][td]601,405[/td][td]626,432[/td][td]-25,027[/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Indianapolis Colts[/td][td]507,525[/td][td]524,393[/td][td]-16,868[/td][/tr]
[/table]

Important to note that the Chargers are now playing their games in a stadium considerably smaller than the one they used last year. Qualcomm- home of the Chargers last season- had a capacity of 70,000. Stubhub (their temporary stadium while a new one is being built in LA) can only hold 27,000. Rams are also using a temporary stadium so they did not have long standing season ticket holders. Even if the Chargers had sold out every home game this season, their attendance would still be 240,000 down from the previous year (selling out every game would mean 216,000).

That alone accounts for almost half the attendance decline for the entire league. Eliminate the Chargers figures and attendance was down 281,176 or just 1.6%. (and of note, that is the figure for those who attended the games and does not include those who purchased tickets giving the teams the revenue but did not go to the game).

NASCAR is in much worse shape- and they didn't have to deal with any protests or Presidential Tweets.

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...atings-decline-is-as-worrying-as-the-nfls-why

Still, things could be worse for the NFL. It could be Nascar. A decade ago the sport emerged as an unlikely challenger to pro football’s small-screen primacy, attracting nearly 20 million viewers to the 2006 Daytona 500. But Nascar has lost more than 45% of its audience since then, according to Nielsen. What’s more, equally dismal live spectator figures have compelled some tracks to remove seats from their grandstands.


https://www.indystar.com/story/sports/motor/2016/07/25/5-reasons-nascars-empty-seats/87534784/

Attendance at NASCAR races is down across the country, as are television ratings.

While the sport and its tracks are on solid financial ground — courtesy of a 10-year, $8.2 billion TV package with Fox and NBC that runs through 2024 — no one is sanguine about the apparent shrinking interest in the sport.

Sunday's Crown Royal Combat Wounded Coalition 400 at The Brickyard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway was the latest sign of decline, registering the lowest estimated attendance in the event's 23 years — about 50,000 fans in stands that can accommodate 250,000.

Mark Miles, CEO of Hulman & Co., which owns the Speedway, said the Brickyard 400 is important to the company and efforts would be made to rebuild audiences.

“It’s a big place,” Miles said. “When you use the whole stands, it takes a really big crowd. It’s an event that’s important to us. I think it’s important to NASCAR and to the NASCAR paddock, so we are just going to redouble the effort to grow it.”

Beyond Indy, the International Speedway Corp. and Speedway Motorsports Inc. — the publicly owned corporations that operate 20 of the Cup series’ 23 tracks — have seen attendance revenue fall. According to a review of the companies’ annual reports, ISC’s attendance revenue is down 49 percent from its highest point, in 2007; SMI’s is down 46 percent from its peak, in 2008.
 
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NASCAR is in much worse shape- and they didn't have to deal with any protests or Presidential Tweets.

For many of the same reasons:

1 - Out of touch and out of control "celebrity" pretty boy drivers.

2 - Stupid politically correct commentary and promotion of less qualified drivers.

3 - Insane ticket prices. (a working class family cannot afford $1000 or more to attend one race)

4 - Stifling, confusing and Grundy-esque rules and regulations that hamper the thrill and competitiveness of the sport.

5 - This one doesn't apply to football, or maybe it does, with high priced "thoroughbred" players instead of blue collar meat packers and steel workers playing the game as part time job: "stock" car racing with cars that in no way, shape or form resemble a "stock" car. With Dodge offering 840 hp factory Challengers, Ford offering 650 hp factory Mustangs and Chevy offering 755 hp factory Corvettes, there is no reason that fast, thrilling racing could take place with cars that are functionally not a nut or bolt different from what a middle class, blue collar guy could buy right off the showroom floor the next day.
 




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:D
 
Important to note that the Chargers are now playing their games in a stadium considerably smaller than the one they used last year. Qualcomm- home of the Chargers last season- had a capacity of 70,000. Stubhub (their temporary stadium while a new one is being built in LA) can only hold 27,000. Rams are also using a temporary stadium so they did not have long standing season ticket holders. Even if the Chargers had sold out every home game this season, their attendance would still be 240,000 down from the previous year (selling out every game would mean 216,000).

That alone accounts for almost half the attendance decline for the entire league. Eliminate the Chargers figures and attendance was down 281,176 or just 1.6%. (and of note, that is the figure for those who attended the games and does not include those who purchased tickets giving the teams the revenue but did not go to the game).

NASCAR is in much worse shape- and they didn't have to deal with any protests or Presidential Tweets.

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...atings-decline-is-as-worrying-as-the-nfls-why




https://www.indystar.com/story/sports/motor/2016/07/25/5-reasons-nascars-empty-seats/87534784/

So , a 1 percent dropoff and mostly among teams who moved or were not competing for a playoff spot , or were previously better than currently are ? Seems about normal to me .....
 




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:D

Gaints were a losing team (two wins going into this game) playing another losing team and the wind chill was minus 12 degrees. Don't think I would have gone to that game either. (70,000 tickets were sold).
 
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Next year will tell more. Season ticket holders can cancel now. Pretty much every football "fan" that I know has stopped watching.
 
One more thing: NASCAR is a family monopoly that has the power to put races in all the tracks they own plus take all the merchandising money. If you actually go to a race, it's astonishing to see how many cars don't have sponsors.
 
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