Monday, May 30, 2011

Tressel resigns


Professional football today lost one of it's great coaches with the resignation of Jim Tressel.

It's exhausting to me just to think about how Tressel's resignation will be reported on and interpreted. There will be the "realists" camp that says he "just got caught" and there will be the "moralists" that say he was just another dishonest coach and that the vast majority of coaches do play by the rules. The truth is somewhere in the middle but who cares about the truth?? There really is a much more important issue at stake here and that is the blatant inconsistency of using student athletes to generate billions in profits for universities.

Tressel is clearly guilty of something. My guess is that Tressel thought he had found a perfect "work around" NCAA rules and regulations by stretching but not breaking them. The problem for Coach Tressel is that he was either naive or stupid. One cannot set up a wholesale "work around" operation with numerous persons involved and not understand the inevitability of that system eventually morphing into something abusive. And thus, "tattoo gate" and "used car gate" have come to be Tressel's waterloo.

Some coaches in the NCAA do follow the rules without trying to bend them, but human nature is that when there are hundreds of millions to be made in profits for each university and each coach, it is unrealistic not to expect greed to take over.

There is only one solution. We must put an end to the NCAA "for profit" system. Above all else, the disporportionate undercompensation of players is patently unfair. These athletes have limited years in which their body can endure the punishment of professional football and the current system robs them of four of their best years. A professional system that more closely mirrors professional baseball's minor league system or even better Europe's professional soccer system would eliminate the money from college football and create new professional sports teams and hundreds of paying jobs for football players, who could always get an education once their careers are finished. What would be left for universities are players not good enough to play professionally, in other words, student athletes.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

RIP: Ron Springs


Ohio State great Ron Springs recently passed away . He was co-captain of the Buckeyes in 1978.

Over the years, it's easy to note how many former NFL players die young. Springs was 54, there are many others. Reggie White was 43, Corey Stringer was 27, Mike Webster was 50, the list goes on and on. NFL players make sacrifices and endure damage to their body and as a consequence many die young.

Springs is one more bit of evidence that a football career creates serious risks for a player.

in the current labor dispute, a central point is NFL owners want to put a rookie salary cap in place for the first 1-3 years of a players career. The average career length of an NFL player is 3 years! The vast majority of players DO NOT play more than 3 years.

NFL owners are greedy and without conscience. It is a terrible wrong that the NFL wants to impose a socialist salary cap on players income instead of allowing the free market to guide salaries. Especially when you consider that the NFL are asking these same players to take physical risks that may indeed significantly reduce the years a player actually lives.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Browns #1 Draft Pick Phil Taylor: He's a Bomber!


After giving it a couple of days to digest the 2011 NFL draft, I can reach but one conclusion regarding the Browns. Well played! They acummulated picks for this draft, stockpiled picks for next year's draft (including 2 number ones) and filled several needs. But the real kicker is the Browns first pick. Not only will he be able to immediatley come in and help stop the run (a badly needed assest for the Browns) he was the original drummer for Motorhead! If Philthy Animal beats his man half as well as he beat the skins behind Lemmy, then the Brownies are set to rule the AFC North with an Iron Fist. Taylor is a real Hellraiser. One word for Browns fans: Oragasmatron! Way to go Brownies!

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Blake Griffin hypes Brown's draft pick Jordan Cameron

Here is a video of Jordan Cameron dunking a basketball.
Now if only the NFL would add a rim in the endzone

Draft comments

The Brown Log is staying locked out too in solidarity with NFL players, but since the owners opened their doors for a few short days after losing a court ruling a few days ago, we will unlock a short comment on the draft.

Most would agree the Browns had a very good draft. The absolutely one sided trade with the Falcons should go down in history as one of the most lopsided draft day trades in NFL history. 5 good players for one, another coup for Holmgren and team.

The only pick I would disagree with is using the 102nd pick to select USC back up tight end Jordan Cameron. I guess his athletic ability was too hard to resist but this guy could not even start for USC, how the hell is he supposed to play in the NFL?????????? Yes he can dunk a basketball but there aren't any rims in the end zone folks. As the Brown log has said a million times, football is a game, not a track meet.

Here is a short write up on Jordan Cameron

Moving on to the lock out, it's now back on after a court ruled that pending their review of the original decision the owners could in fact lock out the players. This week will be huge, if the courts rule in the players favor on Monday May 2, we will likely have a season in 2011. If the courts rule in the owners favor, it's very hard to imagine the 2011 season taking place in full.

The bitter irony is that conservative judges favor the owners and liberal judges are siding with the players. This in spite of the fact that the owners seek socialist solutions and the players seek only to let the free market rule.

Free market principals are the foundation of the laws that guide a judge's decisions yet conservative judges still side with owners, it's pure politics.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

On towards the lockout

It was not a glorious year of predictions for The Brown Log, which ended the season 8-9. I must admit that the Packers win was one game I was thrilled to be wrong about.

On our plate, post Super Bowl is the pending player lockout. An important meeting between owners and players was recently cancelled and this is just one more not so subtle clue of what's coming. The NFL owners intend to play hardball.

I believe the NFL's anti-trust exemption is wrong but it will likely never be overturned by Congress. That's a shame. The free market works.

I find it amusing that owners refuse to open their books to the players. Considering the fact that the basis of the lockout is the owners crying poverty, one would think transparency a good thing. If owners have something to hide it logically would be a factor that hurts their own negotiation. The only fact that could hurt owners would be if secondary sources of revenue are huge profit centers.

Onto the lockout!

Sunday, February 6, 2011

BL Predicts: Super Bowl XLV

As much as I hate the Steelers, Its hard to ignore the fact that the Steelers are a far better team than Green Bay. Even more surprising is that many pundits have gotten caught up in the fact that the Packers are hot but those same pundits neglect the fact that the NFC simply cannot compare to the AFC.

Bottom line: The Packers are a wild card team on a bit of a roll while the Steelers are a talent laden team and the class of the AFC.

BL Predicts:


Steelers 24
Packers 14

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Interview with Colt

Interesting interview with Colt McCoy in which he reveals that he played hurt during the entire 2010 season. That's certainly a surprise

also interesting is the following McCoy quote:

"I'm just excited about getting up there and learning our system," he said. "I need to get up there before the lockout 'cause once the lockout comes we can't talk."


what i find most interesting is "once the lockout comes". it shows that players believe the lockout is a certainty. Will we have a 2011 season?

Monday, January 31, 2011

Vintage Browns: 1978 tying drive vs Jets

An unprobable Sipe led comeback drive in 35 seconds vs the Jets in regulation ties the game and the Browns go on to win in OT.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

A solution to the NFL labor woes: Capitalism


There is a benchmark solution out there that the NFL should look to in order to solve it's labor woes: Professional soccer in Europe. Ironically, in professional soccer, our normally socialist friends in Europe actually utilize a nearly pure capitalist system.

Among the most important highlights of the European pro sports system are:

- Soccer leagues in Europe do not have a player draft, players are free to sign with any club they wish to sign up with.

- Salary caps do not exist.

- There is not a single nation in Europe that has athletic teams at the university level. If an 18 year is worthy of a professional career he gets a paying job on a pro team.

- The revenue stream associated with European soccer is every bit if not more lucrative than the NFL. Fans pay top prices for seats and for games on pay TV. Advertisers are tripping over themselves to pay millions to get in front of Europe's soccer fan base.

- Finally, far more pro teams exist per capita in Europe. There are more leagues and many more jobs for pro athletes. There is a population of about 857,000,000 in Europe compared to about 300,000,000 in the United States. But if you only count the top ten European soccer nations (Italy, England, Portugal, Spain, Germany, Scotland, Holland, Russia, Sweden and France) there are nearly 200 top flight professional teams in Europe. That compares to 32 in the USA. You do the math. The comps get even more obvious if you look at all of Europe and itìs entire minor league system. There are over 1000 professional soccer teams in Europe in which players earn somewhere between a decent to an extraordinary salary. The fact that there are fewer than 100 professional football teams in America bares witness to just how successful the NFL Politburo are at exterminating any and all competition. Start a professional league such as the USFL, off to the gulag for you!

Capitalism is the greatest economic system ever invented. I do not envision that the NFL Politburo will ever implement a capitalist system in the NFL but have no doubt if they did, that the league would thrive, hundreds of new teams would be created along with thousands of good paying jobs for athletes, and fans would rush to buy seats just as they do today.

Bud Shaw sums up what I feel pretty damn well

Have a look at this article about patience and this article about the undertaking required for the Browns to successfully move to a 4-3 defense in 2011

Mangini's character gestapo

I recently heard a story, from a reliable friend, about a current Browns player who will remain unnamed. This key star very recently took part in a rather wild party and engaged in party animal behavior that bordered the limits of good character.

Look for the Browns current management team to be a bit less naive than Eric Mangini when it comes to using character to filter out bad apples. Mangini went too far when he got rid of players like Braylon Edwards and Kellen Winslow because of character issues, and this lack of playmaker talent in the end, cost Mangini his job. The final irony is that one need not put his ear too close to the ground to hear stories like the above about some of the current Browns. There were numerous players that were on Mangini's team that in fact "passed" his character test but are, like all the rest of us, just human beings with some of the same character flaws that drove Mangini to cut others. In reality therefore, Mangini didn't filter out all of the players with bad character, he simply got rid of the guys he did not like. Braylon Edwards and Kellen Winslow are most certainly jerks, but some of those close losses in 2010 could have been wins had we had some more talent in the receiving corps last year. My guess is that Mangini himself is already starting to realize the significance of the fact that his "character gestapo" was in fact both stupid and naive.