State of Sports
In the ever deteriorating state of sports, JRED will address major issues in the major sports enjoyed by Americans. Although some sports are doing well, most are doomed to suffer the failures of greed and power. Here is the state of each sport:--------------------------------------------------------------------------------NFL Football still seems to be in the best shape of all of the major sports. The NFL has the best revenue sharing plan that allows many teams to be successful. Parity is again the theme for today's NFL as there will be a new Super Bowl Champion for the fifth time in the past six seasons. The NFL has the highest attendance and television ratings figures of all sports. Unfortunately, detractors will say that the overall quality of the league has slipped with the salary cap issue. Elite teams of today would not compete with some of the all-time teams in the past 20-30 years, but the league is thriving and fans in any city are able to dream about the Super Bowl turnaround made by the 1999 St. Louis Rams.The NCAA, to the chagrin of many universities and fans, refuses to use a playoff system for D1A football. The 2000 season proved that the flawed BC
There is currently no salary cap and very little revenue sharing in baseball which cannot survive without a revision of its current economic state. Many are predicting a lockout by the owners and another labor stoppage that could destroy the popularity that the game has been recently experiencing. The recent US victory in the Ryder Cup was also a major boost. A playoff system can resolve all issues and has been used for years on other levels of college football. There must be a solution to promote better revenue sharing and imposing some sort of cap on individual player salaries and team spending. There was no clear cut number two, but the maligned BCS ranked FSU number two, and they played Oklahoma. The untimely death of Payne Stewart shortly afterward should put everything in perspective. The game is in trouble after the 2001 season despite what Alex Rodriguez and super agents like Scott Boras are saying to the contrary. There seems to be a growing problem with more and more high school players opting to enter directly into the NBA draft. Besides being unrealistic, the plan promotes communism. Many fear that the playoff system will hurt the revenues of the current bowl system. They were seen as selfish and the public lashed out.
Common topics in this essay:
Oklahoma BCS,
Payne Stewart,
HOCKEY Hockey,
Alex Rodriguez,
Bowl Champion,
Ben Crenshaw,
Rick Pitino,
Mario Lemieux,
NCAA NCAA,
Oakland A's,
playoff system,
salary cap,
labor stoppage,
revenue sharing,
major sports,
2001 season,
top bowl sites,
played top,
top bowl,
universities fans,
ncaa ncaa,
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