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NFL in Danger of Losing Parity?

Len Pasquarelli reports that all is not well with the NFL, despite its overwhelming success with the fans. The collective bargaining agreement with the players’ union is about to expire and there are some rumblings within the ranks of ownership as well.

The fear among the smaller-revenue teams remains that clubs such as the Washington Redskins, who are paying their offensive and defensive coordinators more than several franchises are paying their head coaches, have gained too big a spending edge.

Under threat of league sanctions, some owners are reluctant to discuss the internal revenue sharing issues on the record, but it is clear there is concern over the lingering inertia. The consensus had been that an extension of the labor agreement, which expires after the 2007 season, would be in place months ago and that revenue sharing might be a stickier issue.

It seems, however, like a resolution isn’t close on either front.

“Some of the old ‘one-for-all-and-all-for-one’ philosophy is disappearing,” said one AFC owner this week. “No disrespect intended, but guys like Art Rooney and Wellington Mara must be spinning in their graves, right? I think Paul’s assessment is right, in that we seem to move forward a little bit and then retreat. Certainly [progress] seems incremental right now. We’ve got free agency coming up soon, the draft, and it seems like it will take a miracle to get [a collective bargaining agreement] before those things. And that makes it all a little frightening. I mean, the clocking is ticking, and pretty loudly.”

The NFL has long been the best managed professional sports league in the country. Its popularity is at least partly related to the fact that the owners, including guys like Mara, understood that they are simultaneously competitors on the field of play and partners in business. While some teams, like the New Orleans Saints and Detroit Lions, have been horribly managed for as long as I can remember, every one of them is given every chance to win the Super Bowl. It’s no accident that the Green Bay Packers, who play in a market that simply could not sustain a Major League Baseball or NBA franchise, have won as many Super Bowls as all three New York teams (the Jets, Giants, and Buffalo Bills) combined.

Now, parity has its downsides. It is almost impossible to keep a winning team together in the era of free agency and salary caps, especially with the scheduling and draft rules set up to make repeating more difficult. In a very real sense, fans of NFL teams are essentially “rooting for the laundry,” since the players who wear the uniforms change so frequently.

At the end of the day, the owners will likely come to their senses. Commissioner Paul Tagliabue is a shrewd businessman who has led them well, as did his predecessor, Pete Rozelle. The players, owners, and fans alike benefit from the current system.

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia with his wife and infant daughter.

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It's no accident that the Green Bay Packers, who play in a market that simply could not sustain a Major League Baseball or NBA franchise, have won as many Super Bowls as all three New York teams (the Jets, Giants, and Buffalo Bills) combined.

The main reason that Green Bay has been successful is because they are a public company that is accountable to its owners--who are largely fans. Their articles of incorporation also stipulate that no individual can own more than 200,000 shares, making it difficult for a single person to control the team.

This collective nature of ownership has resulted in more accountability, resistence to the type of corporate control that is solely interested in the bottom line, and has insured that the team remains in Green Bay. Also, the Board of Directors does not get compensated

It is actually one the most democratically-designed corporations in the US and should be a model for other businesses.

Posted by nfn fnke | January 25, 2006 | 05:32 pm | Permalink
 

Major League Baseball wish they only had the problems that the NFL has.

Posted by Thomas Galvin | January 25, 2006 | 05:34 pm | Permalink
 

The NFL, they make Communisum work... :)

Posted by Rick DeMent | January 25, 2006 | 06:28 pm | Permalink
 

The NFL, they make Communisum work… :)

Is that why a beer at the stadium costs $7?

Posted by McGehee | January 25, 2006 | 07:06 pm | Permalink
 

McGee,

Sure and you have to stand in a really long line to get it :)

Posted by Rick DeMent | January 26, 2006 | 07:24 am | Permalink
 

nfn:

Despite all the nifty public ownwership of the Pack, the bottom line is that without the revenue sharing that takes place in the NFL, because of the nature of the TV deal in pro football, the Pack could not compete in Green Bay, regardless of the accountability and all that.

Posted by Steven Taylor | January 26, 2006 | 09:11 am | Permalink
 

Sure and you have to stand in a really long line to get it :)

LOL

Posted by McGehee | January 26, 2006 | 12:31 pm | Permalink
 

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