The offseason and the NFL

Fuck Jim Delany

Moderators: 88BuckeyeGrad, Left Seater, buckeye_in_sc

User avatar
Dinsdale
Lord Google
Posts: 33414
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 5:30 pm
Location: Rip City

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Dinsdale »

MgoBlue-LightSpecial wrote:A lot of us upper midwestern folk feel that football is great in any environment, but is meant to be played in the motherfucking cold.

A lot of us upper leftern folk believe football is suppopsed to be played in the soggy mud.


Which the era of the mud is dying quickly. I believe the three muddy D1 schools are all playing on artificial turf now... pretty sure the Fuskies do, too. From a practical standpoint, there's no comparison. While in the early season, grass would the easy and proper (The Mid/Upper Willamette Valley, where both Oregon schools are, is the grass seed capital of the world, and for good reason -- grass grows at an amazing clip in the valley) -- the field would be nice, and it could be repaired to perfection in less than a week. But by late season, all of a sudden it's quicksand, and daylight hours start diminishing quickly, what light there is through the clouds. "Back In The Day," the fields could get pretty ugly by late November.


Most of the large U&L high schools have gone to carpet, as well. It's definitely taken something away from "U&L Style" football. In days past, it could be pretty difficult to run the ball. The short pass route and screens were the order of the day in the sloppy-muddy. A team had to have absolute perfection between OL and RBs to pull off any sort of running game.


Good old days. Things change.

But I like that Green Bay and Chicago still play their NFL games outside, like it's supposed to be.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
BSmack
2005 and 2010 JFFL Champion
Posts: 29350
Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:21 pm
Location: Lookin for tards

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by BSmack »

PSUFAN wrote:Pittsburgh is pretty NFL-crazy. I have gotten extremely tired of media coverage of the NFL. I like to start paying attention when the ball goes up in the air on the kickoff, and not a minute before.
Pittsburgh is just plain football crazy. Yea, the Steelers get the lion's share of the coverage, but the local Pittsburgh media also cover the CFB and even HS football to a far greater extent than anything you'll see in say CNY, where the locals are trying their hardest to forget they have a D-1 football team in their midst or in Buffalo where the UB Bulls could gang rape a whole sorority house and not make the front page.
"Once upon a time, dinosaurs didn't have families. They lived in the woods and ate their children. It was a golden age."

—Earl Sinclair

"I do have respect for authority even though I throw jelly dicks at them.

- Antonio Brown
User avatar
War Wagon
2010 CFB Pickem Champ
Posts: 21127
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 2:38 pm
Location: Tiger country

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by War Wagon »

RumpleForeskin wrote:Hey, Whitey, besides just pointing out my grammatical errors in my post...
I wasn't pointing out grammar errors, tard. I was slamming you for posting gibberish, yet trying to dress it up all flowery like. You can't make a silk purse out of a sows ear, even though you married one.

...how 'bout making a fucking point...
You mean like this?
The passion that goes behind CFB fan takes effort to really know what you are talking about.
I'm sorry Rumps, but any point I'd care to make would be lost on you, so its really not worth the time.
User avatar
Dinsdale
Lord Google
Posts: 33414
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 5:30 pm
Location: Rip City

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Dinsdale »

War Wagon wrote:
Dinsdale wrote:As far as the "knowledgibilty" of the respective fans...


Take a gander at the NFL Forum. Then browse this forum.


'Nuff said?
Quite enough.

You tend to get unmercifully punked when you show your ignorance in the NFL forum, whilst here you just hope for gentle reach arounds.

I can see why you like it here better.
Terry in Crapchester wrote:Think that one through for a sec, Whitey.

First of all, "half" the crowd at CFB games are not students. Or at least, they aren't at ND. ND has about 10,000 students (admittedly, about 90% of whom probably attend the games regularly). But ND also has a stadium that holds 80,000.

And going back to my experience at ND . . . it wasn't uncommon to have some of the football players in one or two of your classes, or to have a handful of football players living in your dorm. You got to know those guys in a way NFL fan could never get to know the players who play for the team he roots for. So yeah, that's going to translate into a much more passionate fanbase.

As for NFL fan, while there are exceptions to the rule (and NFL markets differ significantly in this regard), a lot of the fans regularly in attendance at NFL games are the corporate type. Tell me you knew.

War Wagon wrote:I'm sorry Rumps, but any point I'd care to make would be lost on you, so its really not worth the time.


What a monumental plungering you're laid upon yourself here.


Funny, everyone else here seems to be making all sorts of intelligent, insightful, thought-out points... but you seem to be struggling with it.


And now you want to claim that other people are incapable of discussing the subject, and therefore it's not worth your time (HOW many posts deep in this thread)?


Unfreakingreal.

Early entry for Board Bitch 2008.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
User avatar
Shine
Leads all Lists
Posts: 1542
Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 4:47 am
Location: In search of 6

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Shine »

Dinsdale wrote: As fat as the off-topic hoops... I dig the CBB, too. Although I'll disagree, since I'd rather watch two bottom feeding NBA teams than a regular season matchup of two unranked college teams. Don't get me wrong, I love them both (I was a serious hoopster as a young'un), but CBB seems to revolve around "two dribbles and a kickout until a defender trips or the shot clock say 1." For similar reasons I prefer CFB, I prefer NBA to CBB -- less predictable.


BUT -- there's few things greater in the sporting world than March Freaking Madness.
If it weren't for the last line this would be a complete waste.

The NBA is the predictable league. Despite the rule changes you'll still see 99.9% man to man defense and with minimal exceptions every team has the same offensive philosophy, run a clear out for a 1 on 1 move. Boring and predictable. In the college game you see a wide mix of defensive philosophies, like the Syracuse 2-3 zone or Temple's match-up zone or the former WVU now UM 1-3-1. You see teams throw a box and 1 when a team has one superior player, you see a team play a full court pressing system, you see teams switch their defenses throughout the game to keep the other team off balance. On offense you have a wide range of styles and in my seriously biased eyes there is NO prettier thing to behold on a basketball court than a true motion offense at work. Even within the overall framework of the motion you can have variations, like Bo Ryan's swing version of the tweak K put into at Dook that does emphasize the perimeter shot. The list of offensive styles is long, diverse and complex.

If you got picked off at first for standing past third you couldn't be more off base than you are with your comment.
"Our staff is going to ensure that anyone who attends this University and wears the Indiana uniform will make this privilege among their highest priorities and not treat the opportunity as an entitlement,'' Crean said in a statement. "We fully expect our student-athletes to accept the responsibilities academically, athletically and socially that come with representing one of the top programs in college basketball history."
User avatar
Dinsdale
Lord Google
Posts: 33414
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 5:30 pm
Location: Rip City

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Dinsdale »

Shine wrote:If you got picked off at first for standing past third you couldn't be more off base than you are with your comment.

Uhm... the Trailblazers are usually in the Syracuse 2-3 zone on D.

They're running basically a variant of Duke's offense.

They switch up the D during the game, often going to straight-up man.

The only time they employ clearout offense is late in the 4th, with Brandon Roy going to the hole and putting on one of his amazing moves, or dishing to a jump-shooter. Actually, the whole offense is predicated on getting open jumpers.

They've faced at least a couple of teams using the Syracuse 2-3.

If by "picked off at first," you meant "the pitcher threw the ball into the bleachers," I guess you nailed it.


Sidenote -- my freaking bad. I've been thotoughly enthused by the much-improved officiating in the NBA this season. Until last night. The refs decided it was a throwback-game... to the late 90's. Worst officiating I've seen in a few years. The Zers stayed within 4 points, despite playing 5-on-8.

The highlights included --

Kevin Garnett grabbing LaMarcus by the arm, attempting to wrestle him down in the lane, right up until the whistle blew... resulting in a foul on LaMarcus.

A travelling call on a guy who didn't have the ball at the time... that was sweet.

Post defgenders standing in front of the basket, with no one anywhere near them. Lat I checked, that's really the only remaining illegal defense rule still in place... someone should have told the refs.

The officiating crew last night should not only be ashamed of themselves, they should be suspended.

I'm not sure if David Stern remembers this, but last summer there was a big scandal involving refs fixing games. The refs last night had obviously been on the phone with their bookies, and were looking to cover a spread -- only logical explaination. They were just flat-out making up rules to enforce the ensure the Boston victory (although with Ray Allen doing that thing he always does against the Blazers late in games, I'm not sure they needed any help).


Great. I tout the improved officiating, and the same day, a mockery is made of it... unBODE me.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
Goober McTuber
World Renowned Last Word Whore
Posts: 25891
Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2005 1:07 pm

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Goober McTuber »

Dinsdale wrote:Great. I tout the improved officiating, and the same day, a mockery is made of it... unBODE me.
I knew it was just more of your bullshit. But you couldn't fool me. I'm still steering clear of the NBA.
Joe in PB wrote: Yeah I'm the dumbass
schmick, speaking about Larry Nassar's pubescent and prepubescent victims wrote: They couldn't even kick that doctors ass

Seems they rather just lay there, get fucked and play victim
User avatar
PSUFAN
dents with meaning
Posts: 18324
Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:42 pm
Location: BLITZBURGH

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by PSUFAN »

"the former WVU now UM"

May as well save that one to the clipboard - should come in useful in a number of forums.
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
Screw_Michigan

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Screw_Michigan »

i have a friend from new hampshire who lovingly refers to everything other than pro sports as "high school sports," because in his eyes, since the pros are the top talent in the world, nothing else is worth watching or following. i completely disagree with his viewpoint, but i guess i kind of understand it because there is no real hardcore d-1 program in the northeast other than boston college and rutgers. bc has a small and elitist fan base while no one gave a shit about rutgers until the last few years.

while i still prefer and enjoy the college game to the pros, i've been watching more pro than college mainly for the fact that sundays i have off while i regularly work 2nd shift saturdays. the only college games i'm only able to sit down and watch are the noon kickoffs and the first half of the 3:30 games. we do have a tv at work, but since my desk faces away from the tv, i'm only able to listen mike patrick bringing up britney spears before georgia scores the winning touchdown over alabama. i have regular sundays off, so i am able to actually sit down and watch an entire game. another attraction for the nfl is, like mgo and the michigan posters said, i enjoy seeing the lions fall to new lows every week and i enjoy seeing the bears embarrass. hardcore bears and lions fans blow my mind because both are two of the worst run franchises in all of pro sports.

i wouldn't go as far to say i'd rather watch the first round of the d-3 playoffs instead of the first round of the playoffs, but i'd rather watch eastern michigan vs. buffalo than any nfl regular season intradivision game involving the nfc south or afc north.
Screw_Michigan

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Screw_Michigan »

and i'm glad to see the rational anti-nba hate being spewed here. there isn't a more boring, contrived, all flash, no substance professional sporting league than the nba. blatant disregard for standard rules, blatant favoritism by officials towards glamor players and glamor teams, as shine mentioned, unimaginative offensive game plans, and (in a nutshell) coaches are nothing more than highly paid babysitters there to coddle and sooth players' egos.

nba games are like top 40 radio and generic mainstream movies: for those who are easily amused and prefer flash over substance.
User avatar
PSUFAN
dents with meaning
Posts: 18324
Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:42 pm
Location: BLITZBURGH

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by PSUFAN »

but i'd rather watch eastern michigan vs. buffalo
Rack that. I hate it when the love of simply watching a football game is eclipsed by the placement of the participants onto some national scale. Buffalo has been crap for years and years...but since they got Gill, they've been scrappy.
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
User avatar
Mr T
Riverboat Gambler
Posts: 3125
Joined: Sun Jan 16, 2005 8:43 pm
Location: 'Bama

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Mr T »

Screw_Michigan wrote: i wouldn't go as far to say i'd rather watch the first round of the d-3 playoffs instead of the first round of the playoffs
Then only reason I say that is because I follow D1-AA, D2, and D3. 95% of those kids wont get a sniff at the NFL and are playing without scholarships or partial scollies.

They arent doing for the fame or the money. Just doing it for the love of the game.
TheJON wrote:What does the winner get? Because if it's a handjob from Frisco, I'd like to campaign for my victory.
User avatar
War Wagon
2010 CFB Pickem Champ
Posts: 21127
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 2:38 pm
Location: Tiger country

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by War Wagon »

Screw_Michigan wrote:i have a friend from new hampshire who lovingly refers to everything other than pro sports as "high school sports," because in his eyes, since the pros are the top talent in the world, nothing else is worth watching or following.
So why would your "friend" refer "lovingly" to everything other than pro sports? That makes no sense.

But I catch your drift. Anyone stuck on the pro game never had kids.
Screw_Michigan

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Screw_Michigan »

War Wagon wrote:So why would your "friend" refer "lovingly" to everything other than pro sports?
No surprise Ph. D—Forklift didn't get the reference. Have another Piss Light, then off yourself, tard.
TheJON
Iowa State Grad
Posts: 4546
Joined: Sun Jan 23, 2005 8:11 pm
Location: Kinnick Stadium by day, Kauffman Stadium by night

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by TheJON »

Good topic....

My interest level for the NFL is about the same as college at this point in my life. I've always loved the NFL, but growing up in Iowa obviously most people here are bigger college fans and so, naturally, I was a bigger college football fan than NFL. I would always watch a Chiefs or Bears game but wouldn't really sit through other NFL games unless they were top level matchups. But college football I would watch just about any team play. I bought into all that "pageantry" of the game stuff. And then when I went to college, my love for CFB got even bigger. It was "cool" to tailgate at 6 am on a Saturday morning and then head over to Kinnick to cheer on the Hawks. Didn't matter how good the team was. Heck, my freshmen and sophomore years we went a combined 4-19, but every game was a kickass event that started the night before in downtown Iowa City. The band would play outside all the bars on Friday night, we'd talk trash with the opposing fans, and you could just get a sense of how pumped up the students/community was for the game the following day. By the time I went home on Friday nights, I didn't even wanna sleep. I was too pumped for the game.

But that's changed a bit since leaving college nearly 5 years ago. I still love the Hawks, I still get season tickets and go to every home game with the occasional road game and go to most of the bowl games. But I've gotten more attached to the NFL and I think it was a lot to do with I'm now more intested in the sport than I am the event. That's not to say that college football is a lousy brand of football or that NFL games aren't more than just a game, but I think a lot of my passion towards college football when I was in college had to do with the things I mentioned above. I don't get as emotionally attached to the Hawkeyes as I used to. Back when I was younger, if you saw me after an Iowa loss you'd probably think I was suicidal! Now I'm a bit more subdued I suppose. I don't think I get anymore upset over an Iowa loss than I do the Chiefs. Often I find myself just hoping to see a good game as opposed to seeing my team play and I think you get more good pure football games in the NFL.

College football still has it's perks. I still love the rivalries, I still enjoy watching an upset, I still enjoy watching the Hawks, and I still enjoy the gameday atmosphere. But I've grown to enjoy the NFL game just as much and I think it has to do with me growing beyond my college years. Like I said, I don't care as much as I used to about the event itself as I do the game, so I've found myself enjoying visiting different NFL stadiums the past few years as I have different college stadiums and this is coming from someone that had been to maybe 3-4 NFL games prior to about 2003. Now I've been to at least 8-9 NFL stadiums and seen probably 20+ games. I don't make Iowa road trips anymore except to Ames or a bowl game. I just don't care about the college atmosphere outside of Iowa that much anymore. I'd rather see a kickass new pro stadium. Let's face it, college stadiums are basically dumps. It's about atmosphere not looks. I can't think of one college stadium I've been to that I'd consider to be a real looker.

My opinions on pre-game/in-game music has changed as well. Used to love the bands, now can't really stand them. I'd rather just hear some stadium music over the loudspeakers. Just my preference.

But the one thing that still keeps me watching college ball is the fact that the regular season is more important than any other sport. Imagine how uninterested we all would have been in the Wva-Pitt game at the end of the year if CFB had a playoff system? Would anyone actually watch that game? I just want a god damn Plus-One system and I'll be happy. I still enjoy the bowl games, but I'd enjoy the whole bowl system a lot more if we got a Plus-One. Think about it.......how amazing was it to watch that Boise State-OU game last year? Now, after watching that game, how pumped would you have been to see how they'd fare against Florida? I know I would have been.

I like how the NFL and college are different though. We get a playoff system in the NFL, we get a bowl system in college. I think it makes for more enjoyment because we all get a little taste of everything. But I think they're both exciting in their own ways. I like a playoff system, I like a bowl system. So I follow both.
MgoBlue-LightSpecial
Eternal Scobode
Posts: 21259
Joined: Wed Jan 19, 2005 2:35 pm

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by MgoBlue-LightSpecial »

JON - Wouldn't you be more engaged in say, a playoff game between LSU and USC, than a regular season matchup between Pitt and WVU?
User avatar
M Club
el capitán
Posts: 3998
Joined: Sun Aug 06, 2006 11:37 am
Location: a boat

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by M Club »

no, because rr would've sat his best players in order to rest them for the playoffs and michigan could very well be stuck with miles as their coach instead. for that reason alone, i love the bowl system.

the playoffs would actually add a sense of desperation to the regular season. currently a team can finish third in the big ten and get a bcs invite [since it's happened before for michigan]. any playoff scenario's going to be so exclusive that you'll have to win your conference to be invited, and if there's any hope for an at-large entry you better have taken care of business during ooc play. wvu/pitt would've been boring if there was a playoff looming b/c it's wvu/pitt. who cares about them, other than who's coaching wvu? there's also the fact that the big east sucks so hard wvu had the conference already wrapped up. most conferences tend to come down to the final week, so everyone will be playing to the final whistle.
User avatar
Terry in Crapchester
2012 March Madness Champ
Posts: 8995
Joined: Thu Jan 20, 2005 12:56 pm
Location: Back in the 'burbs

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Terry in Crapchester »

M Club wrote:the playoffs would actually add a sense of desperation to the regular season. currently a team can finish third in the big ten and get a bcs invite [since it's happened before for michigan]. any playoff scenario's going to be so exclusive that you'll have to win your conference to be invited,
I know I'm in the minority on this point, but that's not what I want to see in a playoff. If history is any guide, if the playoffs are pretty much restricted to winners of the BCS conferences, you'll have one or two completely undeserving teams in most years and a host of better qualified teams on the outside looking in.
War Wagon wrote:The first time I click on one of your youtube links will be the first time.
User avatar
M Club
el capitán
Posts: 3998
Joined: Sun Aug 06, 2006 11:37 am
Location: a boat

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by M Club »

one thing before the other. considering the uneven terrain of college football and the fact you're trying to anoint a single team champion out of 119 or however many there are now, it's fairly reasonable to include the champions of the better conferences, even if we're talking about an eight-team playoff rather than a 16.
BSmack
2005 and 2010 JFFL Champion
Posts: 29350
Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:21 pm
Location: Lookin for tards

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by BSmack »

PSUFAN wrote:
but i'd rather watch eastern michigan vs. buffalo
Rack that. I hate it when the love of simply watching a football game is eclipsed by the placement of the participants onto some national scale. Buffalo has been crap for years and years...but since they got Gill, they've been scrappy.
When my UB alum brother starts getting on me for an SU loss to UB, then they'll have something. Which, at the rate SU football is heading, might be next year. :oops:
"Once upon a time, dinosaurs didn't have families. They lived in the woods and ate their children. It was a golden age."

—Earl Sinclair

"I do have respect for authority even though I throw jelly dicks at them.

- Antonio Brown
User avatar
Terry in Crapchester
2012 March Madness Champ
Posts: 8995
Joined: Thu Jan 20, 2005 12:56 pm
Location: Back in the 'burbs

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Terry in Crapchester »

BSmack wrote:Pittsburgh is just plain football crazy. Yea, the Steelers get the lion's share of the coverage, but the local Pittsburgh media also cover the CFB and even HS football to a far greater extent than anything you'll see in say CNY, where the locals are trying their hardest to forget they have a D-1 football team in their midst or in Buffalo where the UB Bulls could gang rape a whole sorority house and not make the front page.
I have to admit not knowing much about Pittsburgh's coverage of football, but since you compared it favorably to Buffalo and Syracuse, I have to point out that you omitted Rochester. With respect to two of the three, I'd have a hard time believing Pittsburgh's coverage of football trumps Rochester. High school sports now occupy the front page of the local fishwrap's sports section. And the Bills probably get more coverage in Rochester than they do in Buffalo. Hell, WHAM lost broadcasting rights to Bills games five years ago, but their coverage during the fall is still Bills-obsessed.

College football, of course, is a different story. If your sole source of information were the local media, you might very well reach the conclusion that college football doesn't exist, but for the sporadic coverage afforded to the local DIII teams.
War Wagon wrote:The first time I click on one of your youtube links will be the first time.
User avatar
PSUFAN
dents with meaning
Posts: 18324
Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:42 pm
Location: BLITZBURGH

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by PSUFAN »

The two major news outlets in Pittsburgh, the Post-Gazette and the Tribune Review, both do a nice job covering NFL and CFB thoroughly. There is HS coverage, but really, they don't focus on it nearly as much. When I briefly lived on SoCal, there was a lot more HS coverage in the LA Times and the Long Beach Press Telegram. WPA HS football gets a lot of local TV coverage, and there are generally at least two radio broadcasts of games.
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
King Crimson
Eternal Scobode
Posts: 8978
Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 5:44 pm
Location: La Choza, Tacos al Pastor

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by King Crimson »

PSUFAN wrote: I have gotten extremely tired of media coverage of the NFL. I like to start paying attention when the ball goes up in the air on the kickoff, and not a minute before.
this is exactly where i'm at with pretty much all sports at this point, and especially the NFL. i used to like sports talk radio but it's unlistenable in Denver since it's 24/7 NFL/Broncos.

as the NFL TV coverage proper, i don't need all the psychological bullshit and hoky "storylines" that comprise the endless coverage of minutia and "personalities". it's laughable really. where else would people willingly listen to Dan Dierdorf for 3 hours?
""On a lonely planet spinning its way toward damnation amid the fear and despair of a broken human race, who is left to fight for all that is good and pure and gets you smashed for under a fiver? Yes, it's the surprising adventures of me, Sir Digby Chicken-Caesar!"
"
BSmack
2005 and 2010 JFFL Champion
Posts: 29350
Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:21 pm
Location: Lookin for tards

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by BSmack »

PSUFAN wrote:The two major news outlets in Pittsburgh, the Post-Gazette and the Tribune Review, both do a nice job covering NFL and CFB thoroughly. There is HS coverage, but really, they don't focus on it nearly as much. When I briefly lived on SoCal, there was a lot more HS coverage in the LA Times and the Long Beach Press Telegram.
It still blows away Rochester's newspaper coverage. There isn't even a comparison. Check out this video clip of Gateway-Central Catholic's epic WPIAL Championship game.

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07327/836224-365.stm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Notice the date on that. Friday, November 23, 2007. They had an edited 90 second video on their website not more than a few hours after the game ended. The next time the Rochester D&C has same day video coverage of a HS sports event will be the first. All the D&C normally provides is a next day story and a single picture. They never have standings online and their box scores are a joke.
WPA HS football gets a lot of local TV coverage, and there are generally at least two radio broadcasts of games.
Here the disparity is even greater. I get more comprehensive HS football coverage from FSN Pittsburgh than from all the Rochester TV stations combined. The entire WPIAL Championship day slate was broadcast live on FSN. When the Section V Finals are being broadcast live for a whole day on a regional sports network then we can start comparing Rochester's TV coverage to Pittsburgh's. You guys have the HS football coverage bode hands down.
"Once upon a time, dinosaurs didn't have families. They lived in the woods and ate their children. It was a golden age."

—Earl Sinclair

"I do have respect for authority even though I throw jelly dicks at them.

- Antonio Brown
User avatar
Dinsdale
Lord Google
Posts: 33414
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 5:30 pm
Location: Rip City

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Dinsdale »

Didn't realize I was "spoiled."

Every Saturday, the local rag has two pages of HS coverage, with full boxscores, even for the little schools (single-A still plays 8-on-8).

There's games on the radio every friday. The championship games are usually on TV most years. And the local news flies a reporter around for Friday Night Flight, and goes from big local game to big local game.

I just figured they did that everywhere.
I got 99 problems but the 'vid ain't one
Goober McTuber
World Renowned Last Word Whore
Posts: 25891
Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2005 1:07 pm

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by Goober McTuber »

Dinsdale wrote:Didn't realize I was "spoiled."
I thought something smelled in here.
User avatar
WolverineSteve
2012 CFB Bowl Jeopardy Champ
Posts: 3754
Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2005 5:13 pm
Location: The D

Re: The offseason and the NFL

Post by WolverineSteve »

Down here in Central Florida HS football is huge. Newscasts carry highlight packages for most local games as well as games featuring state powerhouses. The local rag has several pages dedicated to weekly matchups, they break each game down like CFB or NFL guys do. It's pretty big here, but I don't get too much into it. I like when a local team goes deep in the playoffs. I was pretty into it when Mike Ford (Bama, now USF) led the Sarasota Sailors to the championship game. I also remember when Tre Smith (Auburn) led the Venice Indians to an undefeated state championship. There's damn good football down here (sup Marcus), but unless a local team is making a run, I don't get to involved.
"Gentlemen, it is better to have died as a small boy than to fumble this football."
-John Heisman

"Any street urchin can shout applause in victory, but it takes character to stand fast in defeat. One is noise --- the other, loyalty." Fielding Yost



Go Blue!
Post Reply