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It's Only A Game

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  • It's Only A Game

    "The sweetest image of this baseball season is the sight of Coamerica Park, filled from the box seats to the bleachers. At the end of spring training, the unemployment rate in metro Detroit had climbed to 23%, the average home price fell below $12,000, and the Tigers calculated that season-ticket sales were down 13,000.

    "The financial forecast in Detroit has not necessarily brightened, but ... the Tigers have provided a jolt- electrifying for much of the summer.... They rank 4th in the AL in attendance, at 31,360 per game; are 5th in the majors in payroll, at more than $115M; and, through Sunday, were still in first.... They were also 48-26 at Coamerica Park, a record they attribute to the overwhelming responsibility they feel playing front of their home fans, many of whom are presumably using what little discretionary income they have to watch the team play. In his first spring training meeting manager Jim Leyland told his players,

    "People are going to to be spending some of their last dollars to come to these games, and we need to give them our best effort. This is not the year not to run out ground balls."



    They came for the game, sure, but more so came for the spectacle, to gaze jaws unhinged at this towering homage to all that is big and American and tax-amenable, to be able to say they were among the 105,121 to attend the first NFL game at the new Cowboys Stadium, the three-million-square-foot steel-and-glass middle finger that owner Jerry Jones has lifted to the recession.

    "OURS IS BIGGER! proclaimed T-shirts everywhere, and this was of course true; the stadium is the largess column-free structure in the world...."



    The Tigers might not win a home run derby against the Yankees or the Angels, but that doesn't mean they can't beat them in the playoff series.

    "We know there are families in the stands who are fighting to keep their houses and feed their kids," "We take that seriously. We can't lollygag our way through a game. We have to give them a show. I really believe they are they reason that we are where we are."



    "It's a wonder, yes, but the stadium may also be one of the great revenue generators. Fans paid an average of $159 for a ticket (by far the highest in the NFL) $8 for a beer, $13 for a Kobe beef burger, and- cha-ching!- $75 for the priveledge of parking in one of the vast oceans that stretch out in all directions."

    "Cowboys Stadium received a sizable chunk of public funding- $325 M."



    "the Tigers are focusing less on their rock-star clientele amd more on their blur-collar base." "The Tigers responded with more $5 tickets, new $5 meals and two extra $5 parking lots."

    "Elaine Lewis, VP in charge of community and public affairs, says the team has given away more than 80,000 tickets this year and worked with more than 2,000 nonprofit organiztions."



    "a small stimulus package for the area, a statement that will help our country be where we want it to be, create an attitude that creates jobs and creates buyers for products." Cowboys' owner Jerry Jones.

    "We're going to have to sell our way out of this thing," and what Jones meant by that was clear: Recessions are for wusses."



    "On a warm evening in the first week of September, 20-year-old Victor Moore is walking on Woodward Avenue, asking for spare change. He is beneath a Fidelity Investments billboard that reads, JOBS CHANGE/DREAMS DON'T, when a passerby turns him down.

    "Then how about a ticket to the game tonight?" Moore shouts after him. "You and I could watch the Tigers together."



    "Practice was over, and now the 49ers gathered in a tight circle on the far field of their facility in Santa Clara, Ca., last Thursday, each raising one arm to form a human umbrella. After a brief silence, a voice rose from within the group and asked, "Am I my brother's keeper?" In unisome the players answered, Yes...I...am!"



    (All of the above quotes are from the September, 28, 2009 Sports Illustrated. It will be archived and available at SI.com)

  • #2
    Re: It's Only A Game

    It really is only a game hope u get it lol

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: It's Only A Game

      Good for the Tigers. I will of course root for the Yankees. The best team money can buy.

      And shame on the Ford family. The Lions finally win a game and it's blacked out in Detroit. Come on they can't give the tickets to some childrens organization?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: It's Only A Game

        Originally posted by cjppjc View Post
        Good for the Tigers. I will of course root for the Yankees. The best team money can buy.

        And shame on the Ford family. The Lions finally win a game and it's blacked out in Detroit. Come on they can't give the tickets to some childrens organization?

        I had the Lions +6.5!

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: It's Only A Game

          3rd world sign #254... the lower 50% spend > 20% of income on entertainment vs education.

          give it 10 yrs...

          Argentina's soccer season on hold due to massive debts
          Aug 9, 2009 ... "The institutions are spending more than they are taking in. ... is directed at club directors for lavish spending and poor accounting, and the AFA leadership. ... The world economic slump has hit Argentine soccer hard. ...
          www.nationalpost.com/m/story.html?id=1875697 - Cached - Similar -

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: It's Only A Game

            Originally posted by metalman View Post
            3rd world sign #254... the lower 50% spend > 20% of income on entertainment vs education.

            give it 10 yrs...

            Argentina's soccer season on hold due to massive debts
            Aug 9, 2009 ... "The institutions are spending more than they are taking in. ... is directed at club directors for lavish spending and poor accounting, and the AFA leadership. ... The world economic slump has hit Argentine soccer hard. ...
            www.nationalpost.com/m/story.html?id=1875697 - Cached - Similar -
            MM are posts are most depressing - this gives me some hope you maybe will be wrong however- if this type of technology can be brought to bear on lower income families well then who knows - maybe a generation of educated and critical thinkers is possible. I won't hold my breath but Salman Khan is truly inspirational imo.

            http://www.youtube.com/khanacademy

            and his interactive learning site

            http://www.khanacademy.org/
            "that each simple substance has relations which express all the others"

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: It's Only A Game

              September 30, 2009

              Dementia Risk Seen in Players in N.F.L. Study

              By ALAN SCHWARZ

              A study commissioned by the National Football League reports that Alzheimer’s disease or similar memory-related diseases appear to have been diagnosed in the league’s former players vastly more often than in the national population — including a rate of 19 times the normal rate for men ages 30 through 49.

              The N.F.L. has long denied the existence of reliable data about cognitive decline among its players. These numbers would become the league’s first public affirmation of any connection, though the league pointed to limitations of this study.

              The findings could ring loud at the youth and college levels, which often take cues from the N.F.L. on safety policies and whose players emulate the pros. Hundreds of on-field concussions are sustained at every level each week, with many going undiagnosed and untreated.

              A detailed summary of the N.F.L. study, which was conducted by the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research, was distributed to league officials this month.

              The study has not been peer-reviewed, but the findings fall into step with several recent independent studies regarding N.F.L. players and the effects of their occupational head injuries.

              “This is a game-changer — the whole debate, the ball’s now in the N.F.L.’s court,” said Dr. Julian Bailes, the chairman of the department of neurosurgery at the West Virginia University School of Medicine, and a former team physician for the Pittsburgh Steelers whose research found similar links four years ago. “They always say, ‘We’re going to do our own studies.’ And now they have.”

              Sean Morey, an Arizona Cardinals player who has been vocal in supporting research in this area, said: “This is about more than us — it’s about the high school kid in 2011 who might not die on the field because he ignored the risks of concussions.”

              An N.F.L. spokesman, Greg Aiello, said in an e-mail message that the study did not formally diagnose dementia, that it was subject to shortcomings of telephone surveys and that “there are thousands of retired players who do not have memory problems.”

              “Memory disorders affect many people who never played football or other sports,” Mr. Aiello said. “We are trying to understand it as it relates to our retired players.”

              As scrutiny of brain injuries in football players has escalated the past three years, with prominent professionals reporting cognitive problems and academic studies supporting a link more generally, the N.F.L. and its medical committee on concussions have steadfastly denied the existence of reliable data on the issue. The league pledged to pursue its own studies, including the one at the University of Michigan.

              Dr. Ira Casson, a co-chairman of the concussions committee who has been the league’s primary voice denying any evidence connecting N.F.L. football and dementia, said: “What I take from this report is there’s a need for further studies to see whether or not this finding is going to pan out, if it’s really there or not. I can see that the respondents believe they have been diagnosed. But the next step is to determine whether that is so.”

              The N.F.L. is conducting its own rigorous study of 120 retired players, with results expected within a few years. All neurological examinations are being conducted by Dr. Casson.

              According to a 37-page synopsis of the study furnished to the league, the Michigan researchers conducted a phone survey in late 2008 in which 1,063 retired players — those who participated from an original random list of 1,625 — were asked questions on a variety of health topics. Players had to have played at least three or four seasons to qualify. Questions were derived from the standard National Health Interview Survey so rates could be compared with those previously collected from the general population, the report said.

              Some health issues were reported by N.F.L. retirees at normal rates (kidney and prostate problems), while others were higher (sleep apnea and elevated cholesterol) and others lower (heart attacks and ulcers), the summary said.
              The researchers also asked players — or a caregiver for those who could not answer — if they had ever been diagnosed with “dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or other memory-related disease.”

              The Michigan researchers found that 6.1 percent of players age 50 and above reported that they had received a dementia-related diagnosis, five times higher than the cited national average, 1.2 percent. Players ages 30 through 49 showed a rate of 1.9 percent, or 19 times that of the national average, 0.1 percent.

              The paper itself questioned the reliability of using phone surveys to assess prevalence rates of diagnosed dementia, as did several experts in telephone interviews. For example, some of those affected may not be reachable; then again, N.F.L. players may have greater access to doctors to make the diagnosis. The lead researcher, David R. Weir, said in an interview that proxies might have been handled differently in past studies.

              “This suggests something suspicious,” said Dr. Amy Borenstein, professor of epidemiology at the University of South Florida. “But it’s something that must be looked at with a more rigorous study.”

              Dr. Daniel P. Perl, the director of neuropathology at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, agreed with Dr. Borenstein but described the Michigan work as significant. “I think this complements what others have found — there appears to be a problem with cognition in a group of N.F.L. football players at a relatively young age,” he said.

              All rates appear small. But if they are accurate, they would have arresting real-life effects when applied across a population as large as living N.F.L. retirees. A normal rate of cognitive disease among N.F.L. retirees age 50 and above (of whom there are about 4,000) would result in 48 of them having the condition; the rate in the Michigan study would lead to 244. Among retirees ages 30 through 49 (of whom there are about 3,000), the normal rate cited by the Michigan researchers would yield about 3 men experiencing problems; the rate reported among N.F.L. retirees leads to an estimate of 57.

              So the Michigan findings suggest that although 50 N.F.L. retirees would be expected to have dementia or memory-related disease, the actual number could be more like 300. This would not prove causation in any individual case, but it would support a connection between pro football careers and heightened prevalence of later-life cognitive decline that the league has long disputed.

              After the University of North Carolina’s Center for the Study of Retired Athletes published survey-based papers in 2005 through 2007 that found a correlation between N.F.L. football and depression, dementia and other cognitive impairment, a member of the N.F.L. concussion committee called the findings “virtually worthless.”

              After initiating a fund in 2007 that provides financial assistance to retirees receiving care for dementia, the league insisted that it was doing so only because the disease “affects many elderly people” well beyond N.F.L. players. And a pamphlet that the league gives every player about concussion risks states, “Research is currently under way to determine if there are any long-term effects of concussion in N.F.L. athletes.”

              “It’s time to edit that brochure,” said Kevin Mawae of the Tennessee Titans, the president of the N.F.L. Players Association. “Now it’s in their words and not just other people’s.”

              http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/30/sp...a.html?_r=1&hp

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              • #8
                Re: It's Only A Game

                Don't pop that champaign in Detroit yet.


                Cuddyer's HR lifts surging Twins over Royals

                Final day drama

                Detroit's once-comfy AL Central cushion is gone, and it comes down to Sunday's finales for the Twins and Tigers.

                I like Joe Mauer, but Detroit could use some good news.

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