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Old 09-22-2017, 10:44 AM  
Direckshun Direckshun is offline
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The NFL is being devoured by its own economic model.

The whole story is good, but I bolded the indispensible parts of the story.

https://www.sbnation.com/2017/9/19/1...s-owners-money

The NFL is being devoured by its own economic model
by Spencer Hall @edsbs
Sep 19, 2017, 8:00am EDT

This is a very boring, simple explanation as to why the NFL’s ratings are declining. It is not an opportunity for you to shoehorn in your feelings about Colin Kaepernick protesting the game. No one really cares about your feelings about Colin Kaepernick’s protest, because if you are the kind of person who gets really offended by Colin Kaepernick’s protest, then your feelings in 2017 are the most boring and predictable thing about you, and telling on you in a deeply unflattering light.

The simpler and also boring systemic problem with the NFL that might actually explain something is its success, and how that success made the ownership class in the NFL fat, lazy, and locked into a business model they have no real reason or incentive to change, even with falling TV ratings.

The absence of real risk of failure is a start. Stakeholders in the NFL cannot lose—at least not under the league’s current structure. Owners split money from the league’s massive TV deals and other media revenue streams. That stream is so dependable, so huge, and so guaranteed that it’s done what large, intractable pools of cash have done since the invention of markets. It has altered and distorted the very thing that created it, and broken the basic exchange between consumer and seller that made the NFL successful in the first place.

It’s a form of laziness, and a special kind different from the standard laziness in the NFL. Laziness bred from prosperity isn’t a new problem for NFL ownership and management. For every old-school Rooney or Mara or Hunt family intent on making at least an honest show of competing, producing a good product, and paying at least paltry attention to the demands of the consumer, there has been a Culverhouse or a Smith, owners who ran their franchises with the least possible effort and expenditure. The slumlords of the NFL took their rent, often without providing anything close to a finished building.

Note: This may be literally true of the 1970s and 1980s Buccaneers, whose stadium sort of looked like concrete that never set exactly right, so they just went with it and said, “yeah, it’s supposed to be shaped like a melted frisbee.” What you call a mistake, the 1970s called architecture.

That approach towards maximizing your dollar with the bare minimum of effort became more sophisticated over time. As the league’s revenues boomed, they became something less like points of civic pride run as passion projects by the locally wealthy, and something more like attractive investment properties with a promising rate of return for billionaires — particularly those billionaires who entered the NFL as strangers to the league, but as intimate familiars of a corporate culture dependent on squeezing every profitable dollar, and trimming every wasteful one from the budget.

For instance: The legend of Dan Snyder tells a story of someone who was “passionate” about the Washington franchise on a personal level. It sometimes leaves out his ruthless economizing of the franchise, a focus on the bottom line interrupted periodically by splashing free agent signings to keep fans semi-interested in the team. That he keeps them in the worst stadium in the league, charges for everything short of oxygen, and rolls out a consistently mediocre product doesn’t matter: His great gift as an NFL owner, after nearly 20 years, has turned out to be a deep understanding of knowing exactly how little actual quality he could slip into the product without breaking the customer’s dependence completely.*

*Side note: Dan Snyder would be an amazing MDMA dealer.

That level of sophisticated coasting in the name of profitability became a laudable thing for owners. Jerry Jones, in particular, emphasized profitability and value for the league, leaning hard on new television contracts, stadium deals, corporate tie-ins, and whatever else he could grab in order to boost the value of the Cowboys to its limit. The momentum for moving the Raiders — one of the league’s oldest recognizable brands, with one of its most insanely loyal fanbases — from Oakland to Las Vegas came largely from Jones, and mostly for the holy grail of profitability. Jones is the crowning example of the NFL’s gargantuan gains in the financial weight room: Since buying the Cowboys for $140 million in 1989, Jones has grown the value of the franchise to $4.2 billion. The team makes a publicly declared $227 million a year.

The NFL was able to do this because, at a certain point, wealth outstrips the power of the assets that created it. In 2017, the league split over $7.8 billion between teams. The money and the success the league enjoyed became so huge that they attained their own gravity, and became separate from the main product that built the league in the first place: professional football.

That separation of the product from the wealth it creates should be familiar to any American consumer. A large company takes control of an entire economy, becomes so large it cannot fail, and thus has no real incentive to do anything but seek rent on that endless, belching pipeline of cash. The product produced generally does not improve, and often without the pressure of competition doesn’t have to improve at all. It might even get worse, or at least watch things like customer service and satisfaction take nosedives.

It’s not exactly a monopoly, but it’s also not-not exactly a monopoly, either.

The value in that kind of behavior doesn’t come from the product. That flatlined in terms of utility a long, long time ago. (The Patriots remain unusual for not only trying, but trying intelligently to produce a good product.) An NFL owner no longer needs that to continue to boost the value of the franchise using anything that happens on the field. Value comes from getting a new stadium someone else paid for, moving the franchise to a more valuable piece of real estate and doubling the value of the franchise overnight. Value comes from leveraging and re-leveraging your existing assets, not by creating anything new.

If you see an NFL franchise as just another asset to be maximized and squeezed for every dime, being good at football — i.e. producing a good product — doesn’t matter. It’s not even rational to put effort towards anything but “value creation,” i.e. shuffling around pieces of the franchise until they sit in the most profitable positions. The Rams doubled their value overnight by leaving St. Louis and moving to L.A. They are a miserable football team run by a despised owner playing in an empty stadium, but the Rams could care less. The fourth most valuable team in the NFL sucks by design, and shines bright enough on the balance sheet to eliminate any real concerns about how bad the product is on the field.

The Rams, the 49ers, and the Washington team are all in the top 10 most valuable NFL franchises. There are other reasons for that besides their efficient disinterest in making a good on-field product — the real estate and cost of doing business in expensive places like L.A., the Bay Area, and D.C. being a huge one — but the lesson for anyone acquiring an NFL team as an asset is pretty clear. Strip the place to the frame, gorge on TV money, and only do the bare minimum to keep people interested.

That distancing of the product — and its overall quality as an experience — from revenue makes for a dysfunctional exchange between the consumer and the producer.

What does that mean, exactly? It means that because the Rams don’t have to worry about quality, they can slog into the Coliseum, wait for a new stadium to be built, and bill themselves as a content company while playing in front of hundreds of bored fans. It means that being good, for a lot of teams, is an accident, or a periodic spasm to regain fan interest spaced between long troughs of minimal effort.

*The NFL is you at work! Congrats, you too could be America’s most successful sports enterprise.

This explains why the NFL now functions less like an open market business, and more like a cartel. (Not a cartel exactly, economics pedants, but cartel-ish.)

A cartel really doesn’t care what you want. It knows what you need, and has it. All behaviors from that point forward only protect the cartel and its control of supply and delivery. There will be no innovation, no new ideas not in service of that maintenance of revenue streams, and no serious competition between cartel members. In fact, they’ll all cut the quality of the product wherever possible to take home the most possible cash.

The NFL isn’t alone in this in sports, and not even in football, either. The disease of guaranteed revenue has bitten college football, too. Texas, the most profitable athletic program in the nation, is a prime example of the strange incentives huge profits can create within a sports franchise. The more money the program makes, the less consistent or important the quality of the product has been to the priorities of those at the top running the cash machine.

But as the most popular sport in America — and one that pools profits — it is the most visible, and most visibly prone to this leveling by the demands of the spreadsheet. Even a distancing by slight degrees, like turning your basic exchange from one of fans opting into an experience into one of a television product given to captive subscribers, is enough to change how ownership behaves.

There is a structural reason live audiences aren’t even necessary anymore: Ticket sales make up such a shrinking percentage of team revenue that the Rams and 49ers might as well play on sound stages, if you think they don’t already. The distance between the sport and the mammoth business it built will only grow, and in that space will be those who loved the NFL, but now watch the condensed version of the NFL on RedZone, and those who make it begrudgingly while looking to the next successful investment opportunity.

That next something might be something like eSports, which the owner of the Patriots just dropped $20 million on via investment in an Overwatch league. When will we know eSports made it? When there are commercial breaks after load screens, fights over gaming arenas being paid for with public money, and a class of owner looking for nothing more than the next grandiose and guaranteed font of cash. eSports is lucky, for the moment: Kraft seems to enjoy making a quality product. It’s when the Haslams and Stan Kroenke* show up that gamers should panic.

*Okay, go ahead and panic, gamers. Stan Kroenke is already there.
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Old 09-22-2017, 03:04 PM   #16
O.city O.city is offline
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They're gonna have to go back to more practice in the next CBA to improve the product on the field, or what they should do, get away from the good old boys league of coaches and look at guys like McVay and Shannahan who are young and innovative.

In all honesty, they need to let a little air out of the bubble before it bursts.

Maybe they see the end of football coming as we know it, so they're just trying to max out before it happens.
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Old 09-22-2017, 03:08 PM   #17
jaa1025 jaa1025 is offline
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Lol, the opening paragraph shows how clueless they are. RIP NFL.
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Old 09-22-2017, 05:17 PM   #18
mnchiefsguy mnchiefsguy is offline
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Drop Thursday night football. Instead just keep the MNF doubleheader all year long.
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Old 09-22-2017, 05:25 PM   #19
Discuss Thrower Discuss Thrower is offline
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Not a bad idea, I had forgotten about the proposal to have all teams play their TNF games after a bye week. I wouldn't be apposed to a 2nd bye week if it improves the product on the field and stop all the complaining.

Part of the issue with TNF is the need to put every team on a Thursday during the season, its just going to make for some shit match ups.
Considering how worthless the 4th preseason game is, there's really no reason to axe it at the very least and add a second bye week.

I really don't see how the gate for a 4th game is that much of a moneymaker once you exclude season ticket holders who've already proven they'll pay for something they aren't even attending.
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Old 09-22-2017, 05:28 PM   #20
BlackHelicopters BlackHelicopters is offline
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Post is good and true. Can't believe I agree with a Direckshun thread.
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Old 09-22-2017, 06:17 PM   #21
BigRedChief BigRedChief is offline
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why gamble when every NFL franchise is worth $2 BILLION now?
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Old 09-22-2017, 06:20 PM   #22
BigRedChief BigRedChief is offline
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Considering how worthless the 4th preseason game is, there's really no reason to axe it at the very least and add a second bye week.

I really don't see how the gate for a 4th game is that much of a moneymaker once you exclude season ticket holders who've already proven they'll pay for something they aren't even attending.
they will eliminate the 4th pre-season game. Add in an 17th game. Give the players 2 bye weeks and everyone is happy. TV gets another week of real games. NFL likes the increased revenue and they expand the rosters. More player jobs. Win/Win.
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Old 09-22-2017, 06:21 PM   #23
Discuss Thrower Discuss Thrower is offline
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**** an odd number of games just for tiebreaking purposes alone.
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Old 09-22-2017, 06:25 PM   #24
BigRedChief BigRedChief is offline
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**** an odd number of games just for tiebreaking purposes alone.
although I agree with your opinion, this is the NFL we are talking about here. More money for them. More money and jobs for players. What do you think their decision will be?
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Old 09-22-2017, 06:45 PM   #25
Discuss Thrower Discuss Thrower is offline
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although I agree with your opinion, this is the NFL we are talking about here. More money for them. More money and jobs for players. What do you think their decision will be?
Get as much money regardless of dilution to their product.
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Old 09-22-2017, 07:10 PM   #26
Rasputin Rasputin is offline
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Quit having Thursday night football until​ Thanksgiving.

Keep making fans wanting more but don't over feed them.
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Old 09-22-2017, 07:39 PM   #27
Bearcat Bearcat is offline
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"Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. And they're getting hoggy."

"Just watch. Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. When you try to take it too far, people turn the other way. I'm just telling you, when you've got a good thing and you get greedy, it always, always, always, always, always turns on you. That's rule No. 1 of business."
That's a good summary of the article... the bubble is slowly bursting, has been for at least a few years, if not a decade. It's not necessarily lazy as the article says, I'm sure the owners are all in on getting while the getting is good.
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Old 09-22-2017, 07:45 PM   #28
Hydrae Hydrae is offline
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Not a bad idea, I had forgotten about the proposal to have all teams play their TNF games after a bye week. I wouldn't be apposed to a 2nd bye week if it improves the product on the field and stop all the complaining.

Part of the issue with TNF is the need to put every team on a Thursday during the season, its just going to make for some shit match ups.
And if you must have games overseas, they can be these Thursday games. Allows more travel time on both sides of the game.
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Old 09-22-2017, 08:16 PM   #29
Hoover Hoover is offline
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Originally Posted by Discuss Thrower View Post
Add a second bye week to either allow for a "better" TNF product or just for the sole purpose of giving more teams exposure on nationally televised games?
Agree with second bye, but Fox and CBS should both be allowed to airdouble headers every week.
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Old 09-22-2017, 08:17 PM   #30
Hoover Hoover is offline
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Originally Posted by Hydrae View Post
And if you must have games overseas, they can be these Thursday games. Allows more travel time on both sides of the game.
Thursday afternoon games? Time zones hurtthat game in states
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