If it comes to a show of hands, we’d have to
agree with the following: Why everybody loves
football is a matter of opinion. For
instance, some say it’s all about “that colorful
non-stop action.” Alternatively, certain
Friends of The Why We Love Football community
explain it as a primal connection to what
appears to be a battle for turf between enemy
forces. You know, all that the stuff we
call offense and defense, plays and formations,
blocking and tackling. Those are just two
examples of the many and varied thoughts we’ve
uncovered. In any case, we’ve got enough
to know it’s a hot issue. And
since someone suggested we do a little research
to get it right, that’s just what we did.
Course right out of the gate we did find
complete agreement on one important point -
everybody DOES love football. Yes,
football is the world’s champion King of
Sports.
Supporting that proclamation is the undisputed
fact that for Neshaminy’s loyal fans, nothing
compares with those Friday nights at The Ridge.
Plain and simple, you’ll find not a single
dissenting voice that it doesn’t get any better
than the sight of the ‘Skins as they stream
through the gate, under the goalposts and charge
out onto the field. All the while overhead
is heard the booming voice of the announcer as
he advises “HERE COME YOUR NESHAMINY REDSKINS!”
For the fans in the stands is there a more
fitting way to greet the team before the game?
We think not.
On
a grander scale (if there is anything more grand
than the Neshaminy Redskins) who can argue that
Super Bowl Sunday is anything but a time of
unity, harmony and celebration in the life of a
football fanatic? And we do remind you
that although the first Super Bowl was only in
1967, it was an instant success. Actually,
to say that the Super Bowl is a national craze
and blockbuster television extravaganza is
almost an understatement.
No doubt about it, the Super Bowl and the season
that leads up to it are really something.
But by way of comparison, consider that the
first televised NFL game was in 1939 at Ebbets
Field (featuring our Eagles and the Brooklyn
football Dodgers). For that presentation,
television executives thought two cameras were
plenty. Flash forward to the religious
experience the Super Bowl has become and you can
now watch up to 12 hours of pre-game and game
coverage all being broadcast to 234 countries
and 130 million viewers worldwide with 40
on-field cameras! If the Super Bowl is the
barometer, then we suggest that alone backs the
thesis that we all love football.
Not yet convinced? Then ask yourself the
following: Have I ever become overly upset
and distraught because of a poorly thrown,
incomplete pass during a nerve-racking moment in
a late game, two-minute drill when a score would
decide the outcome? See what we mean.
By
the way, just in case you think this football
thing is a modern-day phenomenon we remind you
that none other than President Theodore
Roosevelt got involved in shaping the game early
in the last century. You see, those Ivy League
contests (the cradle of football we should add)
were a bit more violent and brutal than was
called for. Teddy took note and threatened to
ban the sport by executive order if the game
wasn’t rethought, retooled and, most
importantly, restrained. Thus, in 1906
major reforms were implemented which included
the legalization of the forward pass (making it
easier to score points and easier to keep the
fans happy too). The point? Football
has been an obsession from its inception.
A bit more on that forward pass rule change.
It really wasn’t until Notre Dame visited West
Point in 1913 to play a powerful Army squad that
the full potential of the aerial game began to
take hold. Checking contemporary newspaper
accounts, you’ll see that it was quarterback Gus
Dorn’s passes to end Knute Rockne that jolted
the Black Knight’s powerhouse squad as Notre
Dame prevailed 39-13. And as an aside,
that event was not only the foundation of the
Rockne legend but it also sparked the intense
interest in cross-sectional intercollegiate
match-ups that persists to this day.
And
further to the subject of changes, we can’t help
but add a comment about just how “crazy mad” a
coach can get as he watches one of those
unpredictable pigskin bounces when it hits the
ground after a kickoff, punt or if it’s fumbled
(hello, it’s the shape of the football we’re
considering here). Even so, we feel
confident that although the aerodynamic
slim-line football (which began to develop in
the early 1930s) may act as if it’s out of
control when it’s loose on the field, it sure is
easier to handle and throw. Rather sadly,
though, the drop kick effectively disappeared
because of those pointed ends. Then again,
those soccer style kicking specialists have
picked up the slack (and don’t you just love
watching those end-over-end, game winning
50-yard field goals).
Anyway, we’ve lost our train of thought here so
perhaps we’ll close by posing a few final
questions: Exactly what is the magic here?
Why do we love this game like no other sport?
What is it that lies at the heart of our passion
and our mania? What’s the real story
behind the obsession, the fixation and the zeal?
Why the insatiable appetite for game day heroes
and the intangibles of team spirit and 12th Man
fans? What is it that drives the crowd to
roar and cheer wildly in the hope of victory and
greatness? Do we need go on?
Maybe we’ll never know the answer to the
statement we made at the opening of this
writing. And maybe we shouldn’t want to
know the answer. Maybe it should remain as
one of life’s little mysteries (just a
fundamental truth not unlike some basic law of
physics). So that’s where we’ll leave it –
as the mystery it is.
But even though it’s a mystery, on two points
we’re clear. We do love football …