Originally Posted by
dannyj
KJ,
Points taken. My perspective is, I don't watch sports (IMO neither does the vast majority) to see this endless activism. Professional players have very large audiences. Again IMO, players should say and do all they want on their own time.
I completely concur, dannyj. I am a big sports guy. I would much prefer not to see any such activism of this nature. I would prefer not to even know that a player or coach or owner supported such and such a candidate as we frequently know. That has nothing to do with why I am tuning in to watch a football or basketball game.
It just strikes me as odd that some people, and I am talking more of media people than you, want to turn it into disrespecting the military or veterans. I just don't see that at all. I think it honors those who serve, for providing that freedom to protest. Now if these protests were against a war and or those fighting a war as protests were back in the 60's, that would be an entirely different matter.
Originally Posted by
dannyj
If the NFL starts seeing less profits for too long (I hear attendances are down) this will end. Time will tell.
I am not aware of attendance being down? We are only in week 3? But it wouldn't surprise me. After only 2 weeks the NFL has already almost admitted what a bonehead thing it was to put not 1 but 2 teams back in LA.

Rams play in front of 25-30 thousand people in a stadium that holds 100 thousand and was filled the night before when USC played, while the Chargers can't fill up a soccer stadium that holds 27,000! Lame!
I guess they figure second biggest market....there should be a team (or 2 there), but those people....those damn southern California people have proven time and time again,
they can't or don't want to support professional football. They like their college football, but apparently have better things to do on a Sunday afternoon.