What's The Future Of Thursday Night Football?
Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2017 8:48 am
If you watched all of Thursday Night's NFL game between the Bunglers and the Texans you are a greater man or woman than me. I couldn't take that past halftime, I really couldn't.
I watched the end of the exciting Cleveland Indians' game instead. Down to their last strike in the bottom of the 9th inning, Francisco Lindor delivered a clutch RBI double to tie the game. And then with great base running by MVP candidate Jose Ramirez in the bottom of the 10th inning, they walked off for their 22nd straight win. Yes, it was only 3-2 and I didn't watch the entire game, but it was more exciting than that second half on the NFL Network. I saw DeShaun Watson's great TV scramble in the first half and honestly that was the only play of interest.
We knew this was going to be a stinker. Two bad offensive lines with one team having a QB on the decline and another team having a rookie QB starting his first game on a short work week -- on the road no less -- made it seem like a 15-13 game was coming. Except it was a 13-9 game.
Now if this game were played on Sunday would it have been any better? Would it have been a 20-16 game instead?
YES. Three extra practice days along with three extra days to get your bodies healthy WOULD HAVE made a big difference. But the NFL doesn't consider that because they don't care about the players. Or their health.
And that's sad. The product is worse on Thursday Nights and yet the NFL doesn't care. They don't look for solutions because more money is rolling into their coffers. And at the end of the day it's all about the money, money, money.
That's bullshit if you ask me. I LOVE THE NFL and I hate to see this great product diminished because the owners just care about more money. This has to end. TV Ratings are steadily declining -- overall viewership in Week 1 was down 13 percent from a year ago when viewership was down as well from 2015 -- and yet the NFL brushes it aside. They said Hurricane Harvey and Irma impacted ratings. Last year it was the election.
At some point IT'S THE PRODUCT!!
The worst games are on Thursday Night, hands down. Scoring is down. Fan enthusiasm is down. Players are playing hurt more often. It's just a fact.
So why don't we look at a better alternative? There is one, you know.
When the NFL added Thursday Night Football in 2006 to prop up the value and exposure of the NFL Network, it was a revenue grab for an additional weekly game. But at that time nobody was airing college football on Saturday Nights on a national basis. That has obviously changed since 2006 as the Pac 10 now has a Saturday night national game on Fox, and ABC has a national game every Saturday night, as does ESPN and its other networks. It's a crowded Saturday night of football now.
But so what. Saturday Night Football would be the perfect lead-in to a weekend of NFL action and it would be a much more competitive game than Thursday Night Football. The NFL Players Association would rather have that than Thursday Night Football. The NCAA would bark, but so what. You would have Saturday Night Football leading into Sunday's full slate of games that would then lead into Monday Night Football. It's the perfect scenario.
Thursday Night Football makes no sense and the players hate it. It's time for a change and one that would help TV ratings, the players, the owners, the networks and the sponsors. Let's make this change.
What do you think?
I watched the end of the exciting Cleveland Indians' game instead. Down to their last strike in the bottom of the 9th inning, Francisco Lindor delivered a clutch RBI double to tie the game. And then with great base running by MVP candidate Jose Ramirez in the bottom of the 10th inning, they walked off for their 22nd straight win. Yes, it was only 3-2 and I didn't watch the entire game, but it was more exciting than that second half on the NFL Network. I saw DeShaun Watson's great TV scramble in the first half and honestly that was the only play of interest.
We knew this was going to be a stinker. Two bad offensive lines with one team having a QB on the decline and another team having a rookie QB starting his first game on a short work week -- on the road no less -- made it seem like a 15-13 game was coming. Except it was a 13-9 game.
Now if this game were played on Sunday would it have been any better? Would it have been a 20-16 game instead?
YES. Three extra practice days along with three extra days to get your bodies healthy WOULD HAVE made a big difference. But the NFL doesn't consider that because they don't care about the players. Or their health.
And that's sad. The product is worse on Thursday Nights and yet the NFL doesn't care. They don't look for solutions because more money is rolling into their coffers. And at the end of the day it's all about the money, money, money.
That's bullshit if you ask me. I LOVE THE NFL and I hate to see this great product diminished because the owners just care about more money. This has to end. TV Ratings are steadily declining -- overall viewership in Week 1 was down 13 percent from a year ago when viewership was down as well from 2015 -- and yet the NFL brushes it aside. They said Hurricane Harvey and Irma impacted ratings. Last year it was the election.
At some point IT'S THE PRODUCT!!
The worst games are on Thursday Night, hands down. Scoring is down. Fan enthusiasm is down. Players are playing hurt more often. It's just a fact.
So why don't we look at a better alternative? There is one, you know.
When the NFL added Thursday Night Football in 2006 to prop up the value and exposure of the NFL Network, it was a revenue grab for an additional weekly game. But at that time nobody was airing college football on Saturday Nights on a national basis. That has obviously changed since 2006 as the Pac 10 now has a Saturday night national game on Fox, and ABC has a national game every Saturday night, as does ESPN and its other networks. It's a crowded Saturday night of football now.
But so what. Saturday Night Football would be the perfect lead-in to a weekend of NFL action and it would be a much more competitive game than Thursday Night Football. The NFL Players Association would rather have that than Thursday Night Football. The NCAA would bark, but so what. You would have Saturday Night Football leading into Sunday's full slate of games that would then lead into Monday Night Football. It's the perfect scenario.
Thursday Night Football makes no sense and the players hate it. It's time for a change and one that would help TV ratings, the players, the owners, the networks and the sponsors. Let's make this change.
What do you think?