No matter what happened, I could never see giving up the Packers. As much as I like other sports, the passion just isn't the same as it is with the Packers.
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Put another way: not much will change.Originally posted by pbmax View PostHitting F5 on SI.com or profootballtalk.com.
Interspersed with ranting incoherently right here.Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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I can follow this most of the way; I also have numerous other interests that would consume the NFL upon its return but I'd always follow the Packers 100% - it will be the rest of the NFL games that will suffer. All for the better.Originally posted by Patler View PostSeriously, if I get away from it. I will not come back with the same commitment I have now. The NHL lost a lot of my attention when they missed a season. The same will happen with the NFL for me. I have a lot of interests, and anyone of them can easily replace the others.
Packers 2010-11 Super Bowl Champs
PackerRats Thompson D. Yahoo Fantasy Football Champ 2019,
PackerRats Thompson D. Yahoo Fantasy Football Champ 2018,
PackerRats Pick'Em 2016-17 Champ + Packers year Survival Football Champ 2017,
Rats Yahoo Fantasy Football Champ 2013,
Ratz Survival Football Champ 2012,
PackerRats1 Yahoo Fantasy Football Champ 2006.
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I tend to agree with this. When the Badgers lost the Rose Bowl, as big a fan of them as I am, it doesn't hurt or sting quite like when the Packers lose just a regular season game.Originally posted by HarveyWallbangers View PostNo matter what happened, I could never see giving up the Packers. As much as I like other sports, the passion just isn't the same as it is with the Packers.
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And you would do that how? That would imply there is a period of time when you are not viewing it. I guess you could get naked goats tattooed on the back of your eyelids so you see them subliminally when you blink...Originally posted by Fritz View PostWatch more porn.
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Imagine for a moment a world without hypothetical situations...
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I thought this comment made by a poster on PFT made a lot of sense.
angrycorgi says:
Mar 7, 2011 9:56 AM
The players are like some stupid little country that has one suitcase nuke and no value except oil exports…98% of these people couldn’t cut it in the real world and they think that one little thing they do is what the world spins on. Talk about rampant arrogance…let’s take the real world as an example and put a trade embargo on them (lock them out) and then nix the NFL so that there are individual teams. Treat NFL rules like an ISO certification guideline. Companies do this everyday in real life. Just because a group of companies operate to a set minimum quality level doesn’t mean they are a trust or present a monopoly.
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I'm not sure I agree with any of that but it did make me think.Originally posted by Old School View PostI thought this comment made by a poster on PFT made a lot of sense.
angrycorgi says:
Mar 7, 2011 9:56 AM
The players are like some stupid little country that has one suitcase nuke and no value except oil exports…98% of these people couldn’t cut it in the real world and they think that one little thing they do is what the world spins on. Talk about rampant arrogance…let’s take the real world as an example and put a trade embargo on them (lock them out) and then nix the NFL so that there are individual teams. Treat NFL rules like an ISO certification guideline. Companies do this everyday in real life. Just because a group of companies operate to a set minimum quality level doesn’t mean they are a trust or present a monopoly.
If the league cannot agree, between teams and players, to run themselves unlike typical businesses, then all is lost.
NFL football is an amalgamation of entertainment and violence, not so far removed from the Roman coliseum.
The owners have to realize that the players are selling their long-term health and well-being, not just a few years time.
The players have to realize that they have more of a need to keep the league healthy than the owners do. I don't blame them for balking at the damned 18 game rule. 18 weeks---fine.[QUOTE=George Cumby] ...every draft (Ted) would pick a solid, dependable, smart, athletically limited linebacker...the guy who isn't doing drugs, going to strip bars, knocking around his girlfriend or making any plays of game changing significance.
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You know that's not completely up to you, right? You have to get the consent of the lamb first.Originally posted by BobDobbs View PostI may finally find the time to lose my virginity.
"Never, never ever support a punk like mraynrand. Rather be as I am and feel real sympathy for his sickness." - Woodbuck
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Do ISo certifications include agreements on limiting each company's spending on labor costs?Originally posted by Old School View PostI thought this comment made by a poster on PFT made a lot of sense.
angrycorgi says:
Mar 7, 2011 9:56 AM
The players are like some stupid little country that has one suitcase nuke and no value except oil exports…98% of these people couldn’t cut it in the real world and they think that one little thing they do is what the world spins on. Talk about rampant arrogance…let’s take the real world as an example and put a trade embargo on them (lock them out) and then nix the NFL so that there are individual teams. Treat NFL rules like an ISO certification guideline. Companies do this everyday in real life. Just because a group of companies operate to a set minimum quality level doesn’t mean they are a trust or present a monopoly."The Devine era is actually worse than you remember if you go back and look at it."
KYPack
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Except the NFL doesn't simply operate to a set standard of quality. If it did, the Bengals would be in the AFL2. It has exclusive business zones. Except in rare and codified instances, it doesn't compete for employees. It shares revenue and arranges sponsorships collectively. It controls where franchises can be located. They do not not schedule games outside of the current league. And they have prevented other professional teams from using stadiums they control, despite the additional revenue that could be earned.Originally posted by Old School View PostI thought this comment made by a poster on PFT made a lot of sense.
angrycorgi says:
Mar 7, 2011 9:56 AM
The players are like some stupid little country that has one suitcase nuke and no value except oil exports…98% of these people couldn’t cut it in the real world and they think that one little thing they do is what the world spins on. Talk about rampant arrogance…let’s take the real world as an example and put a trade embargo on them (lock them out) and then nix the NFL so that there are individual teams. Treat NFL rules like an ISO certification guideline. Companies do this everyday in real life. Just because a group of companies operate to a set minimum quality level doesn’t mean they are a trust or present a monopoly.
And of course the years of court precedent and Federal Laws on the books. So sure, angrycorgi, there are no trust or monopoly issues with the NFL. I mean why should we take the word of justices, lawmakers and lawyers when we have posters at PFT to guide us with know-nothingness?
Perhaps they should re-read this: http://amlawdaily.typepad.com/amlawd...mory-lane.html
A symbolic victory, as the $1 judgement certainly mitigated nothing claimed by the USFL, but a real live case finding as fact that the NFL acted as a monopoly. There was also the small matter of $6 million in legal fees paid by the NFL to the USFL.
And there is the presence of a couple of the crucial features that enable such a monopoly to continue to operate, tacit Congressional approval (sometimes even if its absence of action) and a Collective Bargaining Agreement. Perhaps the PFT poster might also wish to refresh their memory about how Reggie White got to the Packers from the Eagles.
Last edited by pbmax; 03-07-2011, 11:51 AM.Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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