Millionaires v. Billionaires or Them v. Us?
Why the NFL Would Do Us a Favor by Calling Off the Coming Season
There’s nothing like a little dust-up between millionaires and
billionaires to start us thousandaires yawning. And when the upcoming
pro football season is in danger of being cancelled because of it, we’re
likely to say: a plague on both your mansions.
Too bad, because the current struggle between labor and management in
the National Football League not only reflects the current attacks on
unions across the country but conjures up, even if in cartoon fashion,
some crucial American issues: racism, classism, sexism, recreational
violence, and the health-care gap.
No wonder football seems to have
replaced baseball as the national pastime.
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: Just a reminder
that if you are an Amazon.com shopper and travel to that site via a TD
book cover link or book link (like this one for Bob Lipsyte’s new
memoir, An Accidental Sportswriter),
and buy that book, or any other book, or anything else at all, this
website gets a modest cut of your purchase. It’s a wonderful way to
support TomDispatch at no cost to you. Tom]
And then they were gone! It was 1957 and I’m speaking, of course,
about the Brooklyn Dodgers, “dem bums,” my team, central to my
13-year-old life. Their owner (dat bum!) just gathered in his chips,
loaded them all on a flight West, and landed my guys in Los Angeles.
It was the ultimate betrayal. I abandoned baseball and went about the
embittered business of growing up until the Mets (dem bums!) made it
to New York.
Looking back from the present sports world of mega-bucks, endless
rounds of playoffs, and new stadiums so lavish that they're skybox
monuments to the way the most ostentatious versions of class are now
embedded in our lives, it’s hard not to think of 1957 as a lost
egalitarian age in America. (In those days, it cost me maybe $1.25 and
subway fare to inhabit the left-field grandstands of Ebbets Field.) It
was, in fact, the year when Bob Lipsyte, now TomDispatch Jock Culture
correspondent, first reached the majors as a sportswriter for the New York Times.
In 1971, he left the Times and wrote Sportsworld, a
rollicking, angry memoir about sports and the newspaper of record in
the roaring Sixties. But here’s the great thing about writing your
life story so young: you can come back at a proper age and do it all
over again, as Lipsyte has just done in his new memoir, An Accidental Sportswriter, and it’s a blast. (For a TomDispatch video sneak peek at Lipsyte’s new memoir, thanks to Timothy MacBain, click here.)
Imagine what might have happened if, so many decades ago, his summer
job working on a water truck hadn’t fallen through and so, by
happenstance and somewhat reluctantly, he hadn’t become a copyboy for
the Times. He would never have met Muhammad Ali (while he was
still Cassius Clay) or Mickey Mantle or Billy Jean King or any of the
rest of the crew that make his latest memoir a Mr. Toad’s wild ride
through five decades of sports writing and sports watching in
America.
In the meantime at TomDispatch, Lipsyte continues to offer regular deep dives into the universe where sports, politics, and all the weirdness of the American psyche mix and match. Tom
Millionaires v. Billionaires or Them v. Us?
Why the NFL Would Do Us a Favor
by Calling Off the Coming Season
by Robert Lipsyte
While the legalities of, and mathematics behind, the issues at the heart of the NFL dispute may be complex, the basic issues
are not. The league’s owners cry economic woe, while refusing to open
their books. They insist on adding two games to the present regular
season of 16 games and at the same time are trying to reduce the
players’ share of revenues. Moreover, they have been remarkably
unwilling to guarantee long-term health benefits to the players, even as
evidence mounts that dementia and early death are linked to the sort of
brain trauma commonly suffered in football collisions.
It’s not exactly a fair fight, which of course is why unions were invented. It’s estimated that half of the NFL owners are worth
at least a billion dollars each, while slightly less than half of NFL
players make more than a million dollars annually. The average player’s
career lasts fewer than four years.
Most traditional sports media -- while claiming to represent those
thousandaires, the fans -- have framed the battle as one between rich,
greedy young men versus very rich, very greedy older men. The young men,
so goes the present media line, were overpaid in the good times, and
now, like everyone else, must give back in the economic bad times for
the sake of the game. Not surprisingly, this greedy v. greedy take on a
football dispute, which threatens the upcoming season, is hardly likely
to engage the empathy of TV viewers who just want to watch the game as a
respite from joblessness, foreclosure, or the problems that come from
inadequate health insurance.
In case you haven’t noticed, this isn’t all that different from the way the larger labor struggles
of American society have been framed recently. Greedy, overpaid
municipal employees, for example, watching the clock until their bloated
pensions and benefits kick in, are bleeding beleaguered governments
supported by the rest of us. Okay, your basic offensive lineman isn’t
exactly like a beleaguered teacher or nurse, but the key element of the
plot to destroy his ability to bargain collectively against more
powerful forces is the same: make him the alien other, make him
different from us.
Losin’ That Lovin’ Feeling
Back when we thought professional athletes were merely bigger and
stronger versions of ourselves and the teams they played for were
extensions of our pride of place, labor unrest in sports was personal
and painful. Fans wondered how a player could hold out for more money
when they would have played the game for free. How could a league
threaten to cancel a season? Didn’t it know the games gave rhythm to
their lives?
In
more than 50 years covering sports, I find the most striking change is
in the attitude of fans toward the athletes. Fans have, I suspect, lost
most of the emotional attachment they once had for “their” players and
much of the old extended-family feeling toward their teams as well. And
there’s some justification for that: they’ve been hurt too many times by
callous trades, players selling themselves to the highest bidder, bad
behavior of every sort, and franchises simply picking up and moving
elsewhere.
But there’s something larger going on as well, echoed by the
seemingly successful latest attacks on organized labor highlighted by
the recent demonstrations
in Madison, Wisconsin, and in the creation of the Tea Party League by
those seemingly everyday folk who just happen to be funded by the same
kind of robber barons who blackmail cities and states into paying for their ballparks.
Whether you’re a TPL or an NFL fan (or both), the odds are increasing that you’ve lost
connection to the players and instead begun to identify with the
powerboys, the owners, whether of the corporate nation or the National
Football League. This is hardly a phenomenon that began with sports, but
it’s vividly accessible in the simpler, more clear-cut world shaped
around the player-owner-fan dynamic.
I first saw it revving up while covering our previous national pastime, baseball. In 1957, the year I joined the New York Times’
sports department, two of the city’s three baseball teams, the Dodgers
and the Giants, decamped to California for better stadium deals.
Brooklyn Dodgers fans seemed most bereaved and outraged. The team’s
players had often lived in their neighborhoods. Their vicissitudes had
made possible conversations that crossed the usual class and racial
divides. In churches and temples, clergymen led prayers to end losing
streaks. Brooklyn was proud of its progressive history -- only 10 years
earlier, Jackie Robinson had broken the major league color barrier at
Ebbets Field. More African-American players soon joined him.
This was not the first franchise shift (Boston, St. Louis, and
Philadelphia had all moved earlier in the 1950s) but this one got the
most attention, perhaps because even then there were so many fine
writers and academics in Brooklyn. The discussion has never abated.
The flight from Brooklyn to Los Angeles became a symbol of fan betrayal.
It was in those last months before the move, when the heckling from
the stands grew vicious, that I first sensed the old order beginning to
fracture. Those were, of course, just the initial fissures. Since then,
the economic and social gap between fan and jock has widened to a
yawning abyss as the millionaires and billionaires appeared and sports
stadiums increasingly became the preserves of those wealthy enough to
fork over staggering sums for seats.
Meanwhile, the financial value of sport teams escalated and the role
of sportswriters as information couriers between players and fans became
increasingly obsolete. TV freed athletes from needing print journalists
to present them to the public, and most TV sports journalists -- the Daily Beast
writer and editor Bryan Curtis has called sportscasting “a halfway
house for half-wits” -- were thrilled to remain part of the show on the
industry’s terms.
Celebrity Sports Writing
From the athlete to the owner, sports increasingly became a matter of branding. Athletes
could work to control their images through ads and paid appearances.
Nowadays, blogs, tweets, and Facebook pages give teams and athletes
direct access to fans. They can announce (and spin) their own news.
There are tightly-controlled and infrequent mass media conferences.
One-on-one interviews are negotiated with agents and public relations
advisors. Sports writing has become another department of celebrity
journalism.
Attempts at progressive activism within sports tended to be co-opted
by cash; product endorsement money (think of those Nike ads) has usually
kept even socially conscious athletes quiet. Few successful watchdog
organizations were ever formed, though Ralph Nader’s revived League of Fans
may be something to keep an eye on. Its first public statement was a
call for the end of college athletic scholarships, a fundamental
building block of the pro game.
The violent excitement of football, its aggressive marketing, and the
solidarity of the owners -- many of the more recent ones new-money
entrepreneurs -- were all factors that helped push the game past
baseball in audience and revenue. It captured the
techno-smashmouth-imperialism of an empire that didn’t quite know it was fading. Every mad-dog linebacker was an avatar for hedge-fund managers.
Some days I think that the worst-case scenario -- no National
Football League games this year -- might be a blessing, especially if it
were extended down through college and high school into the peewee leagues. It would be a year in which we could study those leading American issues that football vivifies so well.
Take lack of proper healthcare. No one is discussing steroids
at the moment, although the freakish size and musculature of so many
players would seem to indicate either the arrival of ever more
sophisticated performance-enhancing drugs that escape detection or
testing that is less rigorous than we have been led to believe.
The most pressing immediate concern, however, is head trauma. It
usually becomes apparent years after retirement, but it begins in
childhood when pounding on more vulnerable brains leads to lasting damage.
A year off would give everyone a chance to let the steroids drain out
and the testing for head injuries (even among youngsters) begin.
The classism and racism in pro football is almost too obvious to be
worth mentioning. That the players are now predominately
African-American, many of them sons of the underclass, may make this
revolt of the gladiators even harder for the entitled white, ego-driven
plutocrats -- not to mention the fans, predominately white and ever more
likely to identify with the positions of the owners in this dispute.
Otherwise, how do you explain the phenomenal expansion of the fantasy leagues in which every fan gets to be both owner and general manager of his or her own team?
And of course, it hardly needs be said that sexism remains pernicious, ranging as it does from those endless filler shots of hottie cheerleaders
to a continuing pervasive discrimination against female college
athletes which is frequently an attempt to protect the existence of
large college football teams. Title IX, the federal law mandating fair
play for women, requires
an equity between male and female athletes. To balance their 100-plus
squads of football players, college athletic departments routinely lie
about the number of varsity female athletes they support.
And then there’s the violence, on field as well as off (about 20% of NFL players have arrest records, according to articles and a book by investigative reporters Jeff Benedict and Don Yaeger); and don’t forget in the living room -- domestic abuse hotlines light up after big games. Is it the gambling, the liquor, the testosterone?
Maybe we should be rooting for the labor impasse after all, at least
through the coming season, during which we could learn some new football
cheers:
Drain those steroids! Scan those brains! Open those financial books! Hit... softer!
Copyright 2011 Robert Lipsyte