Wednesday, October 20, 2010

An Open Admission that the NFL Meddles in its Games

In the midst of a 23-3 blowout on Monday night, Coach Jeff Fisher of the Titans was calling running plays to spend down the clock and leave with an easy win in hand. Inexplicably, Coach Jack DelRio of the beaten Jaguars called timeouts, when his team had no hope of recovering from the deficit in a the short time remaining.

It is now revealed that the NFL asked the two coaches to call pointless timeouts so that more commercials could be aired.

We all know that the Colts have been the beneficiaries of some of the most rigged games in sports history, so it's nice to see actions like this surface to confirm what everyone knows - the the NFL manages the outcomes of games.

Good for Coach Fisher, by the way. He refused to call needless timeouts, and the Titans scored an additional touchdown because of DelRio's corruption of the game.

Here's the story on Yahoo Sports.

"Jack used his timeouts," Fisher said. "My understanding is they needed network timeouts, and that's why Jack used his timeouts. They came over and asked me to do it, but I said, 'I was hoping to get a first down and kneel on it.'"

Fisher has an interesting sense of humor (you may remember that he tried to break his team's 2009 losing streak by donning a Peyton Manning jersey), but in this case, he wasn't joking. Terry McCormick of TitanInsider.com has the real story, based on Fisher's Tuesday press conference with the local media:

"At the two-minute warning in every game in the fourth quarter, there are conversations that go by. There's conversations that take place at the two-minute warning before the first half. But there's conversations that take place, and it's the official's responsibility to give the head coach a status of commercials and TV timeouts," Fisher said. "Yesterday, I was told that they were two short. And they looked at me and smiled, and I said, 'Sorry, I can't help you.' Mike Carey came across and said, 'Here's the deal. We're two short.' And I said, 'Mike, I can't help you. I'm trying to get a first down and I'm gonna kneel on it.'

McCormick told me that he did not know (nor did Fisher) whether Del Rio took his timeouts in accordance with Carey's request, or the league's specific need for TV timeouts.

Perhaps the most disconcerting thing about this story -- the part that made it so hard to believe at first -- is the idea of a television network, and the need for ad revenue, deciding the pace of a game (no matter how awful it may be). That Carey would break away from his responsibility as a supposedly objective arbiter of the on-field action to try and wrangle timeouts from coaches in the name of commercial breaks -- well, this is where we truly have gone down the rabbit hole. And judging from Fisher's comments, this happens all the time.

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