Wednesday, November 24, 2010

For What Their Worth...

Darrelle Revis
Sadly, with the way society is headed, there seems to be a serious lack of moral and traditional values in which society used to be defined. This change in society has even managed to breach the lives of professional athletes who now feel that they are larger than life. There used to be a time when an athelete was proud to wear the jersey of a city that he was lucky enough to call home. He felt proud to be a part of a team were they would work together in order to be the best in the game. Professional athletes are role models and live in the hearts of every sports fan. When they lose sight of that and shift their attention to the digits after a dollar sign, they lose more than just their reputation.

When a player is at a point were they are willing to sit out for the season unless they become the highest payed player in their position, than a line has been crossed. New York Jets Cornerback Darrelle Revis managed to cross that line this past off season when he did not take part in team pre-season training. After frequent negotiations the Jets managed to reach an agreement with the star Cornerback, with him seeing a cool 48 million dollars over the next four years. Considering the Jets have a good chance at the Super Bowl this year, one would think he would just want to be a part of that team and get recognition for his play.

The NFL is one thing but when you get to leagues with salary caps it becomes on entirely different issue altogether. A league such as the NHL has teams with salary limits that help balance the league so that team wealth does not factor into the success rate. The New Jersey Devils ran into problems when they tried to sign left winger Ilya Kovalchuk. The plan was to sign Kovalchuk for seventeen years, which would put him at forty-four and see him earning 102 million dollars. After the NHL rejected the contract on the grounds that it circumvented the salary cap. Instead they let him sign for 100 million dollars over fifteen years, which seems to be very similar to the original.

A respectable player is New Jersey Devils goaltender Martin Brodeur, the term respectable is used purely in a hockey sense. Brodeur opted for a smaller contract at the beginning of the 05/06 season in order to leave cap space for other talented players to help improve the roster. The fact that he is the winningest goaltender of all time only helps to boost his reputation, along with a good sense of hockey morals. Brodeur really is the ultimate franchise player in today's game, he is not caught up in making commercials or viral videos but rather focuses on the game and how to help the team. He brings back a real sense of old time hockey that is oddly refreshing from the way athletes conduct themselves today.

The point is that athletes are changing for the worse which is going to go all the way through to the youth of the world. The future for teams does not look bright if players continuously put themselves before the team, in a sense they cannot see the forest for the trees. Kids grow up dreaming of playing professional sports for a team that they love in a game that they love. What type of values are there going to be for these kids if money becomes the biggest issue in an athlete's life? A game really needs heart in order to be played to the highest degree, heart is something tha cannot be bought or sold but rather it lives inside of every true athlete who has the hunger to win and to excel in their chosen sport. Athletes need to turn back to traditional values in order to earn the respect of fans, money simply takes away from the game.

1 comment:

  1. I'm slightly disappointed that you missed BrettFavreBrettFavreBrettFavre, seeing as he's singlehandedly ruining the Vikings offense (and, subsequently, their season) by trying to play injured and failing miserably in doing so (he's had 20 turnovers in 10 games, while averaging 1 touchdown per game). He's also proved disastrous in close games - listen to this ...

    In games decided by 7 points or less, the Vikings are 2-3; and Favre has put up these statistics in the losses:

    Against New Orleans; 171 yards, 1 TD 1 INT, 71.7 passer rating
    Against Miami; 225 yards, 0 TD, 3 INT, 44.3 passer rating
    Against Green Bay: 212 yards, 1 TD, 3 INT, 50.4 passer rating

    2 touchdowns, 7 interceptions - and he also managed to lose a fumble in the Miami game. They lost that game 14-10, and Favre had a -4 turnover differential. So far (as far as quarterbacks go), only Todd Collins and Matt Moore have had more than a -4 turnover differential OVER THE ENTIRE SEASON. Their combined passer rating is 61.5 - and that's COMBINED, remember.

    There's also this (I got a kick out of it) ...

    http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=5847763

    ... and a slight reminder that Favre also drove Mangini out of NY in the one year he played for them. That's not even touching on the scandals and the missed training camps (you can tell, too). His ego has destroyed the Vikings - a team that went out of their way to resign him - and has put Brad Childress out of a job, even though most coaches would have gotten rid of Favre, or at least severely reprimanded him.

    Of course though, you (being a Packers fan) must be rolling over laughing. And you wondered why they got rid of him after 2007 ...

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