Arrogance of Ownership: The NFL Lockout Goes Into Overtime
by Dave Zirin l The Nation
On
Thursday, it appeared all was over but the kegger. NFL owners, after
creating airport traffic jam of limousines in Atlanta (seriously), voted
31-0 to, as early reports said, "end the NFL Lockout."
They approved a
10-year "global agreement" which would see the game into a glorious new,
multi-billion dollar future. We were told that everyone except for Al
Davis of the Raiders was happy. which in turn made all the other owners
particularly happy. They even gave a standing ovation to their
meat-puppet, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.
The sports media exhaled.
Fans rejoiced. Belts were loosened, elastic pants were taken out of
storage. Owners crowed that the NFL season, including the $800 million
pre-season, looked glitteringly intact.
There
was only one problem. The owners had not voted to accept a negotiated,
collectively bargained agreement. They were doing little more than
voting to approve their own deal.
Neither the NFLPA Executive Director
DeMaurice Smith, nor NFLPA President Kevin Mawae, nor any of the player
reps had even seen the agreement the owners voted on. It reportedly
includes a series of provisions that hadn’t been discussed or bargained.
It was a power play aimed at using the deadline for a settlement to get
their wish-list on the player’s backs. Eric Cantor would have been
proud.
Mike
Silver of Yahoo sports wrote, that the owners were doing little more
than "....daring the players to swallow terms that have not yet been
negotiated." Washington’s player rep Vonnie Holiday tweeted, "Look guys I
have no reason to lie! The truth of the matter is we got tricked duped,
led astray, hoodwinked, bamboozled!"
Meanwhile,
the official sports media turned up the heat, clamoring for the
NFLPA to just vote on what the owners approved and get back to work. Sports Illustrated’s
Don Banks said that the owners should do their own “Let Us Play”
commercial (thankfully Banks doesn’t work in advertising, since, owners
don’t actually…. You know…. Play.) Green Bay Packers player rep and
Super Bowl hero Aaron Rodgers tweeted, "Media spin on owners position in
this lockout is ridiculous. Believe my colleagues tweets tonight about
the events of the last 24 hours."
Despite
the awesome weight of ownership, media, and personal financial
pressure, the players are holding firm to actually reading and
discussing this mammoth 10-year labor agreement before signing off and
good for them. I fully expect the lockout to end shortly. There is too
much money at stake, too much expectation for football to go forward as
planned. But after a 132-day lockout, the players have every right to
actually understand in full what it is they're voting on. The owners
would be lucky if the NFLPA doesn’t look at the number of publicly
funded stadiums, look at the star-power of their own players and say to
the owners, “Why do we need you again?”
This
is bigger than the NFL. This is about the arrogance of Capital in a
period of austerity. The actions of the owners are little different from
the arrogance of the Republican leaders of congress, Governors Scott
Walker of Wisconsin, John Kasich of Ohio, Jerry Brown of California,
Andrew Cuomo of New York and all who believe that it's belt-tightening
time for everyone but the fat-cats and to hell with democracy, due
process, or any semblance of thought for the greater good. This is about
those at the top of society who want "socialism" for the rich and an
apocalyptic Ayn Randian nightmare for the rest of us.
As
Troy Polamalu, the All-Pro safety for the Pittsburgh Steelers said, “I
think what the players are fighting for is something bigger. A lot of
people think it’s millionaires versus billionaires and that’s the huge
argument. The fact is it’s people fighting against big business. The big
business argument is ‘I got the money and I got the power therefore I
can tell you what to do.’ That’s life everywhere. I think this is a time
when the football players are standing up and saying, ‘No, no, no, the
people have the power.”
I wish
Barack Obama, in his own set of negotiations, had half of their
backbone of the NFLPA. We should stand with their basic right to not
have their future force-fed to them like animals, but to be treated like
men.
Dave Zirin is the author of Bad Sports: How Owners Are Ruining the Games We Love (Scribner).