Please be advised that opinions other than the two options given are unwelcome.
Please be advised that opinions other than the two options given are unwelcome.
This is a business, only the fans give a rats ass where the checks are coming from.
Swede: My expertise in this area is extensive. The essential difference between a "battleship" and an "aircraft carrier" is that an aircraft carrier requires five direct hits to sink, but it takes only four direct hits to sink a battleship.
Needless to say these "don't cares" are not packer people.
Back when Major League Baseball first started with free agency I didn't like it at all. Growing up I was used to teams having primarily the same players year after year unless someone was brought up from the minors or there was a big blockbuster trade. I think it gave the teams more of an identity that you could associate with. I slowly got used to it so when it started in the NFL it wasn't quite as hard to accept. I stopped giving a flying f' about MLB somewhere in the mid-90's and the NFL is the only pro sport I've watched for years. Free agency definitely has taken some of the luster off of the game for me because the business aspect of it became front and center. Pro sports used to be more nostalgic when we fans actually believed that teams and players had some sort of a "loyalty" factor that went both ways. I guess you either adapt or just quit watching the sport because it isn't going to change back to what it once was.
It's somethi I literally have no control over, meaning it doesn't bother me in the least.
I choose the third option; This poll sucks !
LIFE IS ABOUT CHAMPIONSHIPS; I JUST REALIZED THIS. The MILWAUKEE BUCKS have won the same number of championships over the past 50 years as the Green Bay Packers. Ten years from now, who will have more championships, and who will be the fart in the wind ?
I believe most fans - other than Fantasy players - follow a team more than individuals on the roster.
What is a team if not the players on the roster? The team colors? Would it matter if last year's Bears players became this year's Packers?
Justin Harrell and other hardcore packer fans often speculate about, say, the offensive line of the future. Or who will be the WRs of the future. But there is no future beyond the initial rookie contract. The team is mostly new faces every 3 years.
I get that people just go along with it. I think fans had a more fun experience back when there was a real local team to follow; you could develop loyalty to players and track their development.
I think in a game that features 11 starters on each side of the ball continuity is key. I don't like breaking that up constantly. Would like to see a better system that keeps teams together while still forcing them to spend near the cap.
I don't hold Grudges. It's counterproductive.
I'm rooting for the laundry.
Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
Agree with Bass for the most part (except the part about only watching football: in my current life I don't have time to watch anything at all). Frequent roster turnover deprives teams of continuity and makes watching (for those who have time...) less interesting. For all of its warts, the NFL of the 1970s was much more interesting than the 2010s. Or maybe it was just that the NFL is more interesting when you're a kid.
I don't like it. I'd rather teams stay together more.
Yep. I remember in backyard football we would pretend to be "The Mad Stork", Ted Hendricks. We knew he'd always be a Packer because he was a Packer. And then it happened.
But that was the exception. Teams mostly stayed together in the 80s too. I loved tghe 8-8 Pzackers, just knew they were about to be contenders.
It is what it is and that is a business.
Loyalty = show me the $money$
Looking at the Facts:
http://www.packersnews.com/story/spo...lors/99120766/
Free agency showing Packers' true colors
Last edited by woodbuck27; 03-16-2017 at 01:39 PM.
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1970 football was terrible, only I was young so it was hard to know how terrible until the NFL put in the 1978 rules changes.
1970 football was ruled by hoary cliches and a lack of risk taking. Unless your idea of innovation was run, run, then long pass on 3rd and 7.
I could see arguing that the 1960s were better. For every Lombardi then there was the AFL.
But better passing AND player movement means that teams are not stuck in the same track for nearly as long as they were back in the day. Now teams that bounce around from mediocre to terrible and back again are truly poorly run (see Rams, Los Angeles, or Jets, New York).
Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
Nonsense, you had plenty of innovation. See, the Chiefs and Oilers would run on 3rd and long, and the Raiders would throw long on 1st and 2nd downs. Ok, so the 70s wasn't a good time for offensive innovation. But that is just because it was the defenses' turn to shine.
When I say I liked the NFL of the 70s better I'm not speaking of offensive schemes (although the modern paradigm for offensive innovation was forged in the 70s with Coryell) but of being a fan, of following a team.
Most of the year to year change has little to do with free agency. Draft, injuries, players not panning out, and the unforgiving march of time cause most of the roster churn. FA gets a lot of attention, but the best players almost never get there, so it is really the attention is on a handful of players that are just good enough that you've heard their names before, but are not likely truly elite (or not elite anymore, like AP).
Fire Murphy, Gute, MLF, Barry, Senavich, etc!
The salary cap seems to force Ted to let a lot of good players go after 1 contract. I don't remember that so much in ye good ole days. You might be right, but I prefer to think that you are wrong and it used to be wonderful and it's time to Make Football Great Again.