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Fixed/Rigged NFL game?


major

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Reg season loss to the Jaguars a couple seasons ago is criminally underrated as a "worst officiated game ever" candidate.  Jags got away with no less than 3 uncalled obvious false starts on one (I think scoring) drive alone.  I'm talking the right tackle repeatedly being a full yard or more off his starting position by the time the ball is snapped.  I wholly admit we didn't play our best game, but the Jags still needed the mother of all striped advantages to capitalize on that.

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10 hours ago, major said:

Have you ever watched an NFL game that left you convinced that it might have been  fixed/or rigged? If so, which one/ones?

 

It could be sabotage, missed calls or blown calls- officiating, stolen playbooks, spying, etc…

 

My list: 

-Super bowl 37: Raiders and Tampa Bay

-Super Bowl XL: Steelers and Seahawks

-Super Bowl 36: Patriots and Rams

-Super Bowl 50: Broncos and Panthers

-2001 AFC divisional game: Patriots and Oakland 

 


 

 

Your title of fixed/rigged is too strong and bringing the neg reactions.

 

Stolen playbooks/spying has been beat to death, so yes.

 

Point shaving? thaaaaaaaaaaaats where it gets real interesting!  Do i think thats happened?  Id be willing to bet it has several times

 

The other method id assume takes place is insider info wagers. Someone is more hurt than the media knows, tip goes out.

 

Or, certain ref has a gripe with a certain teams coach, or has been talking amongst the other refs that hes "sick and tired of watching that Seahawks secondary holding and getting away with it".  All the sudden that crew draws a Seattle game.

 

The guys a tool but the Tim Donnaghy book was superrrrrrrrr interesting. His point was you didnt HAVE to make a bad call to win these kinds of bets.

 

Certain refs hated Iverson's mouth, he had a tendency to carry the ball.  Angry ref draws that game, pick spread against 6'ers.

 

 

The single most obvious game fixing ever was 2002 Lakers/Kings WCFinals game 6.  The league rigged that game for sure.  The increased revenue of an extra game (game 7 at that) was too big to ignore. NBA doesnt want a superstar-less small market team in the finals, over a huge market team with THE superstar.  NBA always wants to extend playoff series, elimination games at one point were prime games to target against the spread for the underdog..... but at this point, its such common knowledge belief, that its already figured into the spread thats set

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6 minutes ago, Rocky Landing said:

I've always considered the conspiracy theories that the NFL, and/or referees are fixing games to be silly. Football games represent an enormous amount of business revenue, not just for the NFL teams, and television networks, but for the countless ancillary businesses as well. The NFL does have some anti-trust exemption, but it is not a blanket exemption. For the NFL to rig even a single, regular season game would constitute significant felonies, anti-trust violations, and interstate commerce laws, as well as civil litigations. But a playoff game, or a Super Bowl game? Just the legal gambling ramifications alone would be mind-boggling. Why would the NFL even consider such an enormous risk, just for the sake of a narrative? 


Exactly. The NFL’s popularity is such that it simply doesn’t need to push or fix any specific outcomes. People will continue to watch no matter who wins. 
 

Conversely, the astronomical risks to the league, both monetary and legal, if they in fact did engineer outcomes makes this thread and discussion ridiculous. 

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I will say this: if you want to have immediate and direct control over the outcome of a game, all you need is the referee to make a key call or 2 at the right time of the game.

 

1 person needs to compromised--that's it---and you can control the outcome of a LOT of games.

 

This entire league lives right in the middle.  A few plays each game dictate the outcome, most of the time.

 

 

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2 hours ago, Rocky Landing said:

I've always considered the conspiracy theories that the NFL, and/or referees are fixing games to be silly. Football games represent an enormous amount of business revenue, not just for the NFL teams, and television networks, but for the countless ancillary businesses as well. The NFL does have some anti-trust exemption, but it is not a blanket exemption. For the NFL to rig even a single, regular season game would constitute significant felonies, anti-trust violations, and interstate commerce laws, as well as civil litigations. But a playoff game, or a Super Bowl game? Just the legal gambling ramifications alone would be mind-boggling. Why would the NFL even consider such an enormous risk, just for the sake of a narrative? 

 

especially when with 53 players on a team, plus coaches, there is always some narrative the league can celebrate 

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Rigged? No.

 

Part of human error includes unconscious bias. 

 

If we look to sociological studies of unconscious bias, it seems to be a real thing. 

 

It's sort of like how people will wait longer to honk at people in expensive cars compared to people with junkers. (This was a real study.)

 

In NFL, it could be referees calling less penalties on a successful coach and/or team compared to a crap coach/team. 

 

It would be very hard to gather concrete evidence to really support it without it being a tautological argument. 

 

Why did the Patriots win six super bowls?

 

Because it's rigged.

 

Why is the nfl rigged?

 

Because the Patriots won six super bowls.

 

On a side note, these arguments are used all the time. 

 

Why are people poor?

 

Because they're lazy.

 

Why are people lazy?

 

Because they're poor. 

 

So, the bias against the Patriots and the poor serve as the foundation to formulate the tautological argument. 

Edited by leonbus23
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19 minutes ago, leonbus23 said:

Rigged? No.

 

Part of human error includes unconscious bias. 

 

If we look to sociological studies of unconscious bias, it seems to be a real thing. 

 

It's sort of like how people will wait longer to honk at people in expensive cars compared to people with junkers. (This was a real study.)

 

In NFL, it could be referees calling less penalties on a successful coach and/or team compared to a crap coach/team. 

 

It would be very hard to gather concrete evidence to really support it without it being a tautological argument. 

 

Why did the Patriots win six super bowls?

 

Because it's rigged.

 

Why is the nfl rigged?

 

Because the Patriots won six super bowls.

 

On a side note, these arguments are used all the time. 

 

Why are people poor?

 

Because they're lazy.

 

Why are people lazy?

 

Because they're poor. 

 

So, the bias against the Patriots and the poor serve as the foundation to formulate the tautological argument. 

Very well said! 

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Rigged? No. Have there been individual players, coaches, refs, etc. that have been compromised at certain times? Probably.

 

I'm pretty certain that 99% of the people involved in the actual games are giving it their all to win / do their jobs to the best of their abilities, with varying success.

 

For one thing, the players and coaches make so much money now that making a bribe worth it for them becomes extremely expensive. And you have such limited job security that it might not be worth it anyways. If you aren't winning constantly, you get fired and replaced.

 

Refs? There is more potential there, but again, if you are consistently blowing calls on purpose, that is going to anger the league, the owners, other officials, etc, and you will get targeted pretty quickly for an investigation and your job would be on the line.

 

No doubt that there is corruption and cheating in the NFL, but it is virtually all geared toward trying to gain an advantage for your team to win, rather than fixing games to make money. There is already plenty of money to be made in the NFL.

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6 hours ago, Not at the table Karlos said:

Don't have the rules from back then in front of me but those weren't as bad as you're making them out to be. Some were a touch early but it's 50/50 if it gets called. The Reed one where he threw his helmet wasn't at all. The defender can go for the ball which they did on all but one. I wouldn't have called them either. 

I kinda agree the first two were bang bang and the third looks the worst but he’s going for the ball. If I was watching the game I’d be going nuts for pi though cause it just as easily could’ve been called. I def believe games have been outright fixed and others “influenced”. It’s too obvious to me and especially obvious if you make bets and know what the line is. There’s no way Vegas could constantly be that accurate. Along with the games

mentioned here I can think of countless others. Wasn’t there a guy in the 80s in Minnesota that was going to blow the whistle on fixed games and then was found dead a few months later? Remember, in the court system the nfl is not regarded as a sport, it’s listed as entertainment.

Edited by BillsSbSoon
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I guess it depends on your definition of what a "rigged" game actually is.

 

Are we talking about WWE-style scripts, with Roger Goodell working with owners, coaches, players, refs, etc. to fix a pre-determined outcome?  Considering the large number of people who would need to stay quiet, that seems more than unlikely.

 

However, is it possible that refs have occasionally been bought-off and paid to swing some games (or scores) a certain direction?  Is it possible that players have been paid under the table to drop a pass, miss a block/tackle, fumble the ball?  We know it has occurred in other sports (basketball, boxing for example).  So why would football somehow be exempt?  Especially with the huge money gambling generates.

 

We know that NFL refs give favorable calls to the league's biggest stars.  Ed Hochuli allegedly told Cam Newton he wasn't old enough to get a roughing call.  And it's more than obvious that Tom Brady was babied by the officials for many years, after his knee injury.  Many fans observe that star corners get called for pass interference less, even when playing very physical.  Star receivers seem to get the benefit of the doubt more often on questionable catches.  

 

I've heard many in the sports media admit league officials want success from bigger market teams (New York, Dallas, etc.)  That doesn't necessarily mean they are going to fix games in a certain direction.  But it may influence some decisions.  Does anyone remember when Goodell steered Michael Vick away from joining the Bills/Bengals, following his suspension?  

 

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Bills vs Texans wild card game was another rough one.  There have been some bad ones but I’ll give you one I thought was rigged for the Bills and it’s the only game I ever remember watching that I felt the refs were biased for Buffalo in over three decades of watching Bills football it was the 1998 Bills vs 49ers game were the Bills were big underdogs at 0-3.  The game started a winning streak for the Bills and turned around the season.  I remember in that game they called just about everything on San Fran that I actually felt embarassed for them.  I think the sports headline of the D&C on Monday read "Bills flag down 49ers" or something really close to that.  It’s the one game that stands out to me as being "rigged" or biased for the Bills.  

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19 minutes ago, mjt328 said:

I guess it depends on your definition of what a "rigged" game actually is.

 

Are we talking about WWE-style scripts, with Roger Goodell working with owners, coaches, players, refs, etc. to fix a pre-determined outcome?  Considering the large number of people who would need to stay quiet, that seems more than unlikely.

 

However, is it possible that refs have occasionally been bought-off and paid to swing some games (or scores) a certain direction?  Is it possible that players have been paid under the table to drop a pass, miss a block/tackle, fumble the ball?  We know it has occurred in other sports (basketball, boxing for example).  So why would football somehow be exempt?  Especially with the huge money gambling generates.

 

We know that NFL refs give favorable calls to the league's biggest stars.  Ed Hochuli allegedly told Cam Newton he wasn't old enough to get a roughing call.  And it's more than obvious that Tom Brady was babied by the officials for many years, after his knee injury.  Many fans observe that star corners get called for pass interference less, even when playing very physical.  Star receivers seem to get the benefit of the doubt more often on questionable catches.  

 

I've heard many in the sports media admit league officials want success from bigger market teams (New York, Dallas, etc.)  That doesn't necessarily mean they are going to fix games in a certain direction.  But it may influence some decisions.  Does anyone remember when Goodell steered Michael Vick away from joining the Bills/Bengals, following his suspension?  

 

 

That comment got me thinking. There are 12 teams that have never won a Super Bowl. I took the team market value list from the other thread and highlighted those teams. There's a bit of correlation. 

 

1. (-) Dallas - 9.20 billion - 20%

2. (+2) NY Giants - 7.04 - 23%

3. (-1) LA Rams - 6.94 - 17%

4. (-1) New England - 6.70 - 14%

5. (-) San Francisco - 6.15 - 19%

6. (+1) NY Jets - 6.11 - 27%

7. (+1) Washington - 6.05 - 27%

8. (-2) Chicago - 6.00 - 20%

9. (-) Philadelphia - 5.95 - 27%

10. (+5) Las Vegas - 5.77 - 41%

11. (-) Houston - 5.35 - 16%

12. (+4) Miami - 5.24 - 29%

13. (+4) Atlanta - 5.15 - 33%

14. (-4) Denver - 4.87 - 5%

15. (-3) Seattle - 4.82 - 10%

16. (-3) Pittsburgh - 4.80 - 13%

17. (-3) Green Bay - 4.75 - 13%

18. (+1) LA Chargers - 4.63 - 28%

19. (+1) Kansas City - 4.52 - 28%

20. (-2) Minnesota - 4.43 - 19%

21. (+2) Tennessee - 4.37 - 33%

22. (-) Carolina - 4.27 - 27%

23. (-2) Baltimore - 4.24 - 23%

24. (+2) Indianapolis - 4.21 - 30%

25. (+2) Cleveland - 4.20 - 32%

26. (-1) New Orleans - 4.19 - 29%

27. (+1) Arizona - 4.17 - 32%

28. (-4) Tampa Bay - 4.15 - 27%

29. (-) Buffalo - 4.13 - 38%

30. (+1) Detroit - 4.10 - 43%

31. (-1) Jacksonville - 4.04 - 37%

32. (-) Cincinnati - 4.00 - 41%

 

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