so I take it your another one of these "preachers"...like YOU know what is the RIGHT way to run the NFL...your little snipe is so ridiculous it doesn't warrant a reply but just this once...progress you say?...you see a quantum shift in man's innate nature? Tell me ,oh evolved one..just what is the fundamental evolution from 1941 Pacific theater kamikazes to 21st century hijackers taking down 100 story skyscrapers? "Progress!!! Evolution!!!"...please...take the grid offline in the US and there's chaos in the streets inside a few weeks....of course you, evolved one that you are, will shun foraging for food and water because, well, you are an example of "progress!!". Leave the game to people like you and we'll be watching players covered in foam rubber padding bouncing off each other like bumper cars...no thanks...I'll take the ol' devolved , run of the mill football that my father and his father before him enjoyed.
I read, regularly enjoy and have given several "Likes" to your posts.
I don't think any of us posting here (unless there are lurking players, former players or team executives on the Board) know the right way to run the NFL, much less the "RIGHT" way. But, I do think that former players and their representatives as well as the NFLPA do have a sense of that and they seem to be suggesting that things might be done differently when it comes to protecting and caring for players and former players.
I think it is a legitimate subject of discussion among those who care for the game to come to a reasonable view on what is "inevitable" as part of a sport that involves large, fast, well-conditioned men throwing their bodies against one another and what can be "managed" to improve the health and safety of all involved. I really don't see that having that view makes someone a "****y" or whatever.
Sure, from one perspective humanity hasn't evolved much from the days when weak children were exposed on mountaintops, then through the days of the Inquisition and Crusades, through the carnage of WW I, through the insanity of the Holocaust and Pol Pot and then right up to suicide bombers and crumbled buildings.
But using that as a logic to cut off discussion on what might be done to improve and protect a sport that tens of millions of Americans value and enjoy is quite inappropriate and wrong.
Our understanding of the impact of concussion and less noticeable head trauma is still in its infancy. Surely, it is not irrational to suggest that NFL, NCAA, High School and Pop Warner Football might learn from that? And surely, there must be a way to preserve the essence of the game we love while protecting, within reasonable limits, the safety of those who play it?
In the end, every sport will bring with it risks that players must knowingly accept if they are to engage therein.
Hockey, Basketball, Soccer and other contact sports are constantly wrestling with similar issues, trying to find the balance between the risks inherent in the game if it is to be played as it is meant to be played and the available ways of mitigating those risks.
Even MLB players and players from middle school on up run the risk of getting clocked with a hard baseball at a very high speed whenever they step to the plate in a "non-contact" sport. Batting helmets and body armor have been introduced, but it is just part of the game that a Cy Young, Steve Carlton, Nolan Ryan or Roger Clemens will challenge the limits of what is permitted. That's part of the risk of the game. Batters accept their exposure and pitchers accept the inevitability of fines, expulsions and suspensions for going too far.
So all some of us are suggesting is that the NFL is doing well to absorb and adapt to a new level of understanding of the impact of Head Trauma on those who play the game. That understanding is in its infancy right now and no doubt will be clarified over time, to the extent that how we see things today might well be very different from how we see them four or five years from now.
We have no idea where that will end up, but it is far better that this be resolved by those playing and managing the League than by the courts, which will not have the best interests of the game at heart.
And, if you don't think that this could all end up in the hands of a judge who thinks that Tiddlywinks is dangerous because the damn wink can fly into your eye, then I have a bridge to sell you in Brooklyn.
It's far better that this be sorted out by the NFL, today's players, former players and the NFLPA before some lawyer can make a reasonable case that the league has not been responsible in its management of the game.
So, let's have a robust and even heated discussion of this, but let's stop calling each other names.