Jump to content

Parity is dead


BillsVet

Recommended Posts

Tim Keown has an article in the recent ESPN the Magazine which makes the point that parity ended this season. As an example, he points out the top 5 teams in the league going into Week 14 had a .714 advantage in winning percentage over the 5 worst franchises.

 

Along with attendance being down (probably in part to the recession) fans are remaining home in cities where teams are losing. He cites the Raiders, who drew a mere 40,720 against Kansas City.

 

Regardless, there are several issues on the horizon for the world's most popular sports league: an uncapped year, probable CBA issues in 2010-11, a decrease in several teams values, and the shift to an uneven league with perpetual winners and losers. Good read if you get a chance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The defending champion Steelers lost to the Raiders, Chiefs, Browns & Bears.

 

The defending NFC champion Cardinals were swept by the 49'ers, but beat the Vikings.

 

The Bengals swept the Ravens & Steelers and lost to the Raiders.

 

The Titans started at 0-6, and are now 7-7.

 

The Eagles swept the Giants and lost to the Raiders.

 

You sure that parity is dead in the NFL?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The death of parity is more about how rule changes have made having a good QB so important that once you have a good one, you are competitive for 10 years in most cases.

 

Excellent point. You can't breathe on a QB or a Wide Receiver without getting called for a penalty.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Right, the AFC log jam at 7-7 = dead parity.

 

Look peeps, there's a dangerous thing called freedom of speach. Don't believe everythang you read. Especially from turds like Tim Keown. Who's he... Mel Kuypers old bendover rag bag twink?

 

Parity dead in the NFL is just a stupid thing to say. Take a look at our opponant this week.

 

Pete Rozelle- cold, dead & grinning at the 'parity' of his accomplishment.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tim Keown has an article in the recent ESPN the Magazine which makes the point that parity ended this season. As an example, he points out the top 5 teams in the league going into Week 14 had a .714 advantage in winning percentage over the 5 worst franchises.

 

Along with attendance being down (probably in part to the recession) fans are remaining home in cities where teams are losing. He cites the Raiders, who drew a mere 40,720 against Kansas City.

 

Regardless, there are several issues on the horizon for the world's most popular sports league: an uncapped year, probable CBA issues in 2010-11, a decrease in several teams values, and the shift to an uneven league with perpetual winners and losers. Good read if you get a chance.

 

 

I think there's plenty of parody in the league.

 

Oakland, Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo have been parodies of themselves for the better part of a decade!

 

:rolleyes:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The point is not that there's a huge middle of teams with 6-7 wins at this point. It's more so the fact that the same teams are above the pack, especially in the AFC. You've got NE, IND, SD, BAL, and PIT in the playoffs seemingly every year. Over in the NFC, NYG, PHI, and GB come to mind.

 

Sure there might be a team that squeaks into the playoffs, but it's the same teams that are winning 10+ games every year. And while there are exceptions and down years, the bad teams like STL, CLE, DET, BUF, and OAK aren't moving ahead at all.

 

This is much bigger than QB's and rules associated with hitting them or interfering with WR's. It's the fact that: a small elite group of teams is out-pacing the rest.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The point is not that there's a huge middle of teams with 6-7 wins at this point. It's more so the fact that the same teams are above the pack, especially in the AFC. You've got NE, IND, SD, BAL, and PIT in the playoffs seemingly every year. Over in the NFC, NYG, PHI, and GB come to mind.

 

Sure there might be a team that squeaks into the playoffs, but it's the same teams that are winning 10+ games every year. And while there are exceptions and down years, the bad teams like STL, CLE, DET, BUF, and OAK aren't moving ahead at all.

 

This is much bigger than QB's and rules associated with hitting them or interfering with WR's. It's the fact that: a small elite group of teams is out-pacing the rest.

Is it much bigger than the QB's? Look at the GOOD teams you named. EVERY ONE of them has an ELITE QB except Bal & Flacco is the best QB they have had since Dilfer. Now look at the BAD teams you named. NONE of them have even a DECENT QB.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The made fun of him a few years ago, but Ralph called it. When teams don't share income, the league falls apart.

?????? WTF?

 

 

Team's ARE sharing revenue.

 

The league (and teams) made tons of money last year---a fantastic season financially.

 

The suggestion that parity "is dead" is silly. How did Arizona get into the SB last season?? Or the Giants the year before that? Because they were "dominant"?

 

The worst teams get to pick first from the pool of the best college players every year. Everyone is given the same number of picks to use as they see fit.

 

Look, all teams are chosing from the same talent pool of players, coaches, FO. It's not "the League's" fault if owners are bad at assembling successful talent. Finding a great QB has ALWAYS been a key to success---it has nothing to due with "rule changes". It's not "luck" or "coincidence" that teams that have been perennially successful have solid ownership and great FO talent. The League didn't make that happen.

 

This stuff gets repeated all the time. Nonsense.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The death of parity is more about how rule changes have made having a good QB so important that once you have a good one, you are competitive for 10 years in most cases.

 

I believe that has always been true since FA began in 1993....

 

The teams that were great for a long period in the 90s also had a great QB.....QBs is the most important to have dominance.....Period.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is it much bigger than the QB's? Look at the GOOD teams you named. EVERY ONE of them has an ELITE QB except Bal & Flacco is the best QB they have had since Dilfer. Now look at the BAD teams you named. NONE of them have even a DECENT QB.

 

Tell me who is it that picks QB's? Because each team with a solid QB also has a good to excellent GM.

 

The point is simple: the NFL cannot equally distribute the human effect, i.e. talent evaluators and front office personnel, to each team like it can salary cap dollars and draft picks. It's human nature that some people are better than others at football management and this means teams stuck in the doldrums (OAK, STL, BUF) while others win nearly every season (IND, PIT, NE, NYG).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tell me who is it that picks QB's? Because each team with a solid QB also has a good to excellent GM.

 

The point is simple: the NFL cannot equally distribute the human effect, i.e. talent evaluators and front office personnel, to each team like it can salary cap dollars and draft picks. It's human nature that some people are better than others at football management and this means teams stuck in the doldrums (OAK, STL, BUF) while others win nearly every season (IND, PIT, NE, NYG).

I TOTALLY agree a GOOD GM is paramount. The point about QB's is an excellent GM will make it a priority to get one, even then some luck is involved. If the Bills had lost another game or two, Big Ben would be a Buffalo Bill.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

at the moment, Parity is NOT dead !! .......NFL league rules make for the most competitive balance in all of sports.....reverse draft (bad teams pick first), salary cap (same finances), scheduling (1st place teams play other first place teams), Free Agency, etc.....

 

parity ends in the FRONT OFFICES.....where there is a vast difference in the quality of decision makers when it comes to evaluating talent. thats where the bills are sorely lacking. people like Bill Parcells and Bill Polian have proven track records of success for multiple organizations.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...