#nfl cba
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shida · 1 month ago
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actually staying up to watch dynamite tonight because i have a day off tomorrow i cheered!! real loud!!
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subsidystadium · 2 months ago
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The absurdity of non-disclosure agreements, sports and taxpayer money
The San Antonio Spurs want a new arena. That isn’t new or shocking news. But if you want actual news on this subject? Good luck.  For the last year or so, the Spurs and city officials have kept every possible detail out of public view if it pertains to a new arena. No discussions. No interviews. Just silence. Now, will taxpayers end up paying quite a bit? Sure. But they won’t know about it until…
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seddair · 2 years ago
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The NBA is so unbelievably fucked lmao
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workingforitallthetime · 2 years ago
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hi, so I’m new to hockey, especially NCAA hockey. wanted to ask a question? is there a reason why NHL players get drafted so…young? it amazed me to know that most NCAA players only stay for 1-2 years and then they just leave? the ones who stay aren’t usually the superstars? i mean isn’t it kind of crazy that some of these players get drafted even before they enter college
the parameters of NHL draft eligibility are bargained between the league and the NHLPA, but in general eligibility spans ages 18-20.* that's at least preferable to the sketchy MLB system where kids can get attached to teams when they're much younger than 18.
And in the context of the overarching hockey developmental system, the NHL rules make more sense than the NFL requirement that players have to be at least three years past high school graduation before they can be drafted. NFL draft picks are almost universally coming out of college, so they've got something to do for those three years. but less than 30 percent of the picks in the 2022 NHL draft were current or committed NCAA players. 36 percent came out of the CHL, and they can't keep playing there after age 20.
my general sense is that it's the exception rather than the rule for college players to leave after 1-2 years. the bigger names we spend more time talking about on tumblr do, but there are a lot more truscotts and beechers and eddies out there than there are kents and owens. take a look at harvard or minnesota's rosters: they're thick with draft picks and the majority are upperclassmen. you've never heard of them but they're playing 3-4 years.
*this is a very broad generalization, please see Article 9 of the CBA for the specifics.
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fossore · 1 year ago
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Reading fic involving the NHL and there seems to be this concept that you can choose not to be drafted? And like. You can make it pretty clear but there’s not actually a formal system like that. In most (men’s) leagues you don’t even have to say you want to be drafted.
Having skimmed a couple CBAs for major league sports, you can’t do anything for the NHL, you can submit something saying you want to be drafted to the NBA and NFL but only if you want to be drafted younger than your general draft class, and you can say you don’t want to be drafted for the MLB (this was not actually in the CBA there’s a separate rules book).
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uswnt5 · 2 months ago
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No, now it is, people are saying. Because of the new CBA, the team’s on the hook for all 3 years
need to see that in writing. every other pro league it changes with voluntary retirement. Obviously career ending injury would be different.
It's like tua in the NFL, the team would have had to pay out most of his contract had he medically retired from football cause of his concussions but there is also some relief
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tallmantall · 3 months ago
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#JamesDonaldsononMentalHealth - The NFL’s Latest Approaches To #MentalHealth
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By JENNY VRENTAS Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com One of the first questions asked was a simple but important one: Where do you put the office of your team’s mental health clinician? In a conference room with about 100 medical professionals and NFL team employees, one club shared its answer: On the first floor of team headquarters, near the locker room and the cafeteria, where the players spend much of their time. It’s the only office in the building without windows, for privacy. Another attendee raised his hand and asked about tips for how to connect players with the help they need, while also maintaining their privacy? A different NFL team’s director of player engagement explained that once he shares the cell phone number of the team clinician with a player, he doesn’t ask for or receive any further information, unless the player signs a release form. He also tells players he has a list of several other names, including clinicians of multiple genders and races, so they can talk to whomever they are most comfortable with. JamesDonaldson notes:  Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes. Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use. Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticle www.celebratingyourgiftoflife.com One morning last week, Nyaka NiiLampti—a licensed psychologist hired in December as the NFL’s vice president of wellness clinical services, after three years working for the players union—was leading this discussion about how to address the mental health needs of the NFL’s 2,000 players. The agenda for this day-long Player Health Summit, hosted by the NFL and the NFL Players Association in New York, included hot topics like a 25-minute “CBD Update” and a session on concussion treatments. But the primary focus was implementing the new measures to address behavioral health and pain management that the league and the players agreed to in May. The summit gathered head team physicians, head athletic trainers and directors of player engagement. Also present were the behavioral health team clinicians and pain management specialists that new joint agreements between the league and the players require each team to retain before the start of the 2019 season. As of last week, Allen Sills, the NFL’s chief medical officer, said “virtually everyone” had filled both positions. In the context of the ongoing labor negotiations toward a new collective bargaining agreement this summer, the fact that new provisions to protect player health were added to the current CBA in May reflects the two sides’ ability to work together. In introductory remarks at last week’s summit, Sills introduced his counterpart at the players union, Thom Mayer, as “a real partner.” In turn, Mayer pointed to the meeting as a sign of progress over the last few years. “The idea that we would have had this meeting previously,” Mayer told the room, “is inconceivable.” Solomon Thomas was also in New York last week, spending part of the summer break from the #NFL calendar on a media tour along with Christine Moutier, the chief medical officer for the #AmericaFoundationforSuicidePrevention. After Thomas’s older sister, Ella, died by #suicide in January 2018, the 49ers defensive end began to use his voice to speak about #mentalhealthandsuicideprevention. About five months after losing Ella, Thomas and his family participated in an overnight walk for the AFSP in Dallas, one of his first steps in becoming a #mentalhealthadvocate. “I realized what I can say can really help other people, or really help myself, or get a conversation started,” Thomas says. He’s been part of a growing conversation about #mentalhealth beyond the #NFL, but also within it. Last season, Vikings defensive end Everson Griffen spent five weeks away from the team to focus on his #mentalhealth. Thomas’s 49ers teammate, Marquise Goodwin, sat out for two weeks as he and his wife, Morgan, processed the grief of losing twin baby boys 19 weeks into her pregnancy. And midway through last season, the 49ers helped Thomas address his own #mentalhealth in the wake of losing his sister. GM John Lynch, who drafted Thomas and once took a class with him at Stanford, told him that if he needed some help, they could connect him with a therapist. “He could kind of tell, I was probably putting a mask on in front of my teammates,” Thomas says. “That was really helpful, really powerful for me, to have John reach out to me like that and help me continue to get mentally healthy and to continue my walk through my grief process.” The increased spotlight on both #mentalhealth and the use of painkillers, both inside and outside the #NFL, played a role in the new guidelines being adopted for the 2019 season. Over the past several years, the NFL and the Players Association have worked to establish #mentalhealth resources for both current and former players, but these have varied team to team and many players have said they aren’t aware of everything that is available. Now with regulations written into the CBA, which could thus be grieved or penalized if they are not met, the bar has been raised. About 90 percent of teams were already working with a clinician in some capacity, NiiLampti said, but those clinicians were at the clubs an average of three hours per week. The new agreement mandates they must be available to players at the team facility a minimum of twice per week, for at least 8 to 12 hours—a significant increase. And while past education included steps like an hour-long module for rookies or a slide-and-a-half during training camp, clinicians will now conduct at least two #mentalhealth education sessions per season. Teams have emergency action plans for other serious health concerns—cardiac emergencies, heat illness and severe neck and spine injuries—and now they will each create a plan for #mentalhealth emergencies, to be reviewed and rehearsed annually. The question about office location is a common one, because teams are trying to work through the best way to fully integrate the presence of the clinician, most of whom have not been listed among the “medical staff” on team websites. One team at the summit in New York said that the clinician is the first meeting rookies take as part of their orientation; another club said that they make sure the clinician is visible, on the practice field, on the team plane and in the lunchroom, to normalize his presence. At an identical summit in Las Vegas—teams picked one of the two to attend—one club said its head coach put his arm around the clinician while meeting with players and said, “I use this person. My family uses this person.” But even with these steps, there are hurdles in getting some players to feel comfortable seeking them out. “Some guys won’t sit at the same lunch table as our team therapist, because they are like, I don’t want anyone to think something is wrong with me,” Thomas says. “I have heard guys say out loud, ‘Oh, I can’t sit at that table.’ I’m just like, why? There’s a huge #stigma about that; people are still afraid of therapists, still afraid of getting help, because they don’t want anyone to know that anything is wrong with them.” Men overall are less likely to seek out #mentalhealth resources than women, studies have shown, but there are specific stressors in the #NFL compounding that. Players are taught not to trust fully anyone in the building, because they can be cut or traded at any time. “Guys are fighting for their job every day,” Thomas adds. “So they don’t want to have anything seen as a disadvantage or a reason to not be the one chosen. ‘Oh, both of them have the same amount of yards and TDs, but he has #mentalhealth problems.’ That’s scary to some guys, I guess. But, it’s something that needs to change.” For these reasons, during the #mentalhealth discussion at the summit, NiiLampti described confidentiality as the “lynchpin” to making the program work. One team clinician described how he keeps a case file totally separate from the team for every player he sees, as if they were a patient at his private practice. Another clinician said he has never been asked by management about any interactions with players, which is why he continues to work for his team. It’s customary in clinical medicine for mental health records to be separate from all other medical records, and the joint mental health agreement includes stipulations for that, according to Sills: The only #mentalhealth information that should be entered into a player’s electronic medical record is any psychotrophic medicine he is taking, to avoid his being prescribed a drug that could interact. Teams were also encouraged to have a referral network of multiple #mentalhealthprofessionals, both to address specific topics such as substance abuse or family counseling, and to ensure that players have options beyond the team clinician. One team’s director of player engagement simply posts their names and contact information on a bulletin board outside his office, so players don’t even have to ask him for a referral. Thomas says he chose to see a therapist who is outsourced by the 49ers, rather than an in-house employee, which made him more comfortable talking about both on- and off-the-field stressors. He started meeting with her once a week in a room at the team’s headquarters in Santa Clara, Calif. Before he started working with her, Thomas says he didn’t know how to talk, who to talk to, or where to start. She worked with him on acknowledging all the emotions he was feeling after losing his sister, how to release his anger and different coping mechanisms and outlets for his grief. By the end of the season, Thomas began to see a difference in his play on the field, too. He began to recognize the player he was watching on film again. “I honestly felt like I was running in sand sometimes, or running in mud,” he says. “Then just being able to feel that twitchiness again, that explosiveness. … That’s all due to my head clearing up, or being able to freely live, I guess.” During OTAs this spring, 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan brought in a group of Navy SEALs for a training session focused on the mental side of the game. After a team-wide discussion about how to cope with stress, they opened up to the floor to anyone who wanted to talk. Thomas stood up and talked about how mental health affects physical health, and that he deals with his mental #stress through seeing a therapist. If his teammates see him coming back from a session with his therapist or finishing up a phone call with her, he’s open about telling them what he was doing, hoping they can see it as he does—just a normal part of his routine. “If our brain’s not working, our bodies aren’t going to work. I said one way I dealt with that was through therapy, and so I hope that motivates guys … Just trying to let them know that nothing's wrong with it—it’s a good thing, it’s for help,” Thomas says. “If guys do it more openly, and the culture of #mentalhealth changes in the NFL, I think that is going to change a lot. Because we are a very masculine, tough sport. If we start that change, it will echo throughout the whole league and society as well.” When Sills was hired by the #NFL two years ago, he says Roger Goodell asked him for the major health issues he believed needed to be addressed. After concussions, Sills listed behavioral health and pain management. Around the same time, in the spring of 2017, the players union filed a grievance alleging that the #NFL and its teams conspired to violate the terms of the CBA regarding the use and dispensation of opioids and other prescription painkillers; it cited a federal lawsuit filed by the widow of former #NFL fullback Charles Evans. “We had significant concerns,” Mayer says, “but I truly feel this is a great example of something good coming out of a disagreement.” What stole the headlines when the health and safety agreements were announced in May is that the #NFL and the players union agreed for the first time to work together on studying alternative pain management therapies for players, including marijuana. They’ll do so as part of two new joint medical committees that will make recommendations on policies and practices for pain management and #mentalhealthandwellness. A new prescription drug monitoring program will also track all prescriptions issued to players, reviewed by both the league and the union. At last week’s summit, team employees listened to a 15-minute presentation on alternatives to opioids, followed by the CBD update led by Kevin Hill, an addiction psychiatrist and author of Marijuana: The Unbiased Truth About The World’s Most Popular Weed. (The MMQB was only invited to sit in on the first hour of the summit, including introductory remarks and a session on the behavioral health practices.) Sills said the joint pain management committee has already met with a couple of experts about the current state of research and will explore ways they might be able to further ongoing research into marijuana and its derivatives. Several players have advocated for the NFL to change its policies to permit marijuana use for pain management, but Goodell and medical advisors on both sides continue to indicate that more information is needed. “My opinion, and there are a lot of us who share it, is that opinions and attitudes are far outstretching the science behind CBD right now,” Mayer said. Added Sills: “We are open-minded to look at every aspect of how we can better treat pain, but it’s from a data-driven perspective. … We will let the science take us where we need to go.” As players begin reporting to training camps this month, teams will start sharing information on the new #mentalhealth and pain management rules. It’s not a coincidence they’ll be addressed together; one affects the other. The goal, NiiLampti said, is to work with players to prevent an emergency or crisis stage, and that these services can help in optimizing player health and performance. Some clubs, like the one that has a “prevention team,” to this end, are farther along. Others are still figuring out the clinician’s office location. “Guys care about that,” Thomas says. “I think we will have some … where there’ll be some players who maybe are held out, or missed games or practices for ‘medical reasons,’ That'll just be the end of it,” Sills says. “And we should all be comfortable with that reality.” • Question or comment? Email us at [email protected]. Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com Read the full article
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rmfantasysetpieces1 · 4 months ago
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En nomine stade , et pele et spiritus mane.. garrincha
thank you nwsl, the college draft is one of the most financially and organizationally corrupt while perfectly legal actions in usa sports
totally criminal in nature and essense
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The NWSL is scrapping its collegiate draft because it's the only sports league out there with sense Story by Mike D. Sykes This is For The Win’s daily newsletter, The Morning Win. Good morning, Winners! Welcome back to the Morning Win. Thanks so much for rocking with us today. We appreciate you giving us a bit of your time. Folks, somebody has finally done it. There's a league out there who finally had enough courage to say, "You know what? We don't need a stinkin' draft!"
It's the NWSL.
The burgeoning soccer league unveiled its new collective bargaining agreement on Thursday morning, with changes that I'd argue make it the most pro-labor CBA in sports today. But the biggest change was this: Eliminating the collegiate draft.
Like most American sports, the NWSL brought in talent through a draft system. Like most other drafts, the selection order was based on team record at the end of the previous regular season. The worst teams pick first.
Now, players entering the NWSL will enter free agency immediately upon entering the league and pick their teams, as they should. This is how it's supposed to work, folks!
Look, I know you're probably bristling at what I'm saying here. We love our drafts. They're great theater! Leagues like the NFL, NBA and NHL essentially turn them into pageants for us all to consume and we eat it up.
From the countless super-early mock drafts to the scouting combines that can get creepy and uncomfortable to the ceaseless reporting on rookie workouts and team trade negotiations, we lap it all up.
All that aside, the NWSL had to do this. The league was losing out on talent to leagues worldwide that didn't have drafts. This and other pro-player provisions in the CBA should theoretically curtail that.
Plus, drafts are unfair to players. That's not how entering the workplace should be, right?
I could bore you here by discussing the free market principles drafts violate, but I won't.
Instead, imagine this: You graduate from college at the top of your class. You're on your way into the world and ready to go to the coolest company you've been looking at. It's located in a city you've dreamed of living in for a long time.
But, surprise! You get a phone call from another company. Definitely not a cool one. But they just drafted you. Get ready to learn not-cool-company, buddy. That's where you're headed. It's not over. On top of that, you have to talk about how it's a dream come true to work at this precious company you had no desire to work for yesterday.
I'm sure some of you will yell at me about how this impacts parity in sports and how bad teams will never be good again because all the good players will already go to the good teams. But that's not exactly true!
Different players have different desires. Some players will want to play for good teams, sure. But not every good team has enough playing time available for you.
For example, Brianna Pinto of the North Carolina Courage told Vanity Fair that she may not have gone to Gotham FC if she had the choice as a rookie because she didn't get enough playing time.
“Maybe there were other opportunities to get on the field right away,” she said. Those are the things incoming rookies will have to make decisions on and those decisions won't always lead to stacking the decks on a particular team.
Sometimes, it might! But, in the end, it's the player's choice. And that's what matters most. Shoutout to the NWSL for recognizing that.
The rest of the American sports leagues should pay attention. https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/nba/the-nwsl-is-scrapping-its-collegiate-draft-because-it-s-the-only-sports-league-out-there-with-sense/ar-AA1pfMuV?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=TBTS&cvid=05fe2e58b21d49bf9745baedd7c21591&ei=59
IN AMENDMENT collective bargaining agreement of the nwsl is arguably the most pro labor in usa sports, even over legendary baseball https://www.vanityfair.com/news/story/national-womens-soccer-league-agreement-draft#:~:text=Under%20the%20new%20CBA%2C%20which,choose%20which%20team%20they%20join.
#rmsoccer
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battleangel · 7 months ago
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Gambling Addicts Suicides = Billions for the NFL
Per fherehab.com, gamblers have the highest suicide rate, proportionately, of any addiction. While there are more drug and alcohol addicts (about 25 to 30 million in the US) as opposed to 10 million or so pathological gamblers, a larger percentage of gamblers attempt or complete suicide.
Per Google, up to half of people in gambling disorder treatment have suicidal thoughts, and about 17% have attempted suicide. A 2018 Swedish study found that people with problem gambling had a suicide mortality rate that was 15 times higher than the rest of the population. According to studies, people with gambling disorder have the highest suicide rate of any addiction disorder, with one in five attempting suicide.
A gambling addict is five times more likely to die by suicide than a drug addict or alcoholic — thank god online sports betting and betting apps are now ubiquitous and you can bet on every play, every down in every NFL game!
May is Mental Health Awareness Month and I wanted to discuss an addiction that is fairly invisible compared to other addictions like drugs, alcohol, opioids and food — gambling.
You can't see that someone has gambled themselves into debilitating debt or bankruptcy.
There is no visible weight gain, change in physical appearance, behaviors, mannerisms or behavior like there is with other addictions.
If the gambling addict doesn't disclose their addiction, unless you somehow have access to their financial records, or unless their addiction gets to the point where it costs them their job or their residence — there is no way you would know they have a gambling addiction unless they tell you.
Unlike liquor, fentanyl, cocaine, percocet, vicodin, oxycontin, junk food, fast food and other addictions which have visible markers — gambling addiction doesn't.
Gambling addiction is the most invisible and the most deadly addiction.
Gambling addiction has the highest rate of suicide.
That is why I wanted to discuss and examine what the NFL has done in terms of exploiting gambling addiction for profit during the last day of Mental Health Awareness month.
The NFL is literally profiting off of gamblers' addictions, misery, depression and suicides and I don't see much discussion around it.
Restless, desperate, depressed, suffering, irritable, in debt, broke, broken down, suicidal — exactly the type of gamblers the NFL covets, creates, endlessly preys on and exploits.
The 2020 CBA doesn't involve a financial agreement for the players regarding compensation for online sports betting on NFL games and fantasy football.
The players are the ones being betted on and moved around as pawns in peoples fantasy leagues, they're the ones incurring the permanent brain damage every single season and assuming all the risk yet getting exactly zero of the reward as it is set up in the CBA to go exclusively to team owners unlike say television deals and rights which players share a part of the revenue with the league.
Online sports betting now that it is allowed inside NFL arenas as of 2023 is expected to explode in further popularity — the players will see exactly zero additional revenue from this.
Per MSNBC.com:
"But the rise in sports gambling on the internet and phone has accelerated the prevalence of gambling addiction. The ease with which people can access online sports gambling platforms is frightening. The states love it, as they are getting dollars from the gamblers. Nor is there any effort to restrict its visibility, the way tobacco ads have largely been banned. These sportsbooks bring in billions a year, while millions of lives are ruined. They depend upon compulsive gamblers, sucking them dry while misery mounts not just for themselves, but for their friends and families. Now, with the advent of artificial intelligence and big gambling data, there are different types of bets that can be offered every few seconds while watching games in real time.
Much of the growth has been in the online betting platforms that offer a dizzying number of wagers that change minute-to- minute. A flood of advertising, technology that allows for one-click betting at home, and nearly unlimited betting options during games have collided. In the past five years, there has been an explosion of online sports betting apps from companies like DraftKings, FanDuel and Caesars. Focus on gambling disorders has historically been minimal in the United States. This is in part because people with gambling disorders have been viewed as foolish or lacking willpower. We equate the ability to hold onto money and win money with success and equate losing with greed."
Per CNN.com:
"Many states naively or some other way went about legalizing sports betting without adequately estimating the costs on problem gambling resources," said John Holden, an associate professor of management at Oklahoma State University who studies sports gambling regulation."
They estimated the costs on problem gambling — they want people addicted to gambling.
The NFL wants this because its billions more in revenue for them and, remember, the most recent 2020 CBA does not allocate any revenue that the NFL generates from online sports betting and fantasy football to the players that are sacrificing their bodies and minds to make the NFL that money.
So, the NFL reaps all the rewards while the players are the ones on the field taking all of the risks and not making a single solitary dime and we are talking about billions in revenue.
Talk about a slave plantation when 70% of the players are black and 0% of the owners are black yet black men only make up 6% of the US population.
Modern day slavery.
Per CNN.com:
"Many recovering gambling addicts feel helpless against the constant barrage of advertising encouraging betting on games.  "We consider it to be predatory advertising because it's incessant and it glamorizes gambling," Grondin said."
Its incessant, glamorizing, ubiquitous and being done in partnership with the NFL so the ads are relentlessly shown during games and parlays and betting lines are discussed by analysts during the pre-game show.
The ads and marketing are literally inescapable, just like a stalker and true predator — predatory.
Per CNN.com:
"Regulators are wary of how tightly they can curtail messages in gambling advertising without running afoul of First Amendment protections on commercial speech. "A lot of state regulators have big First Amendment fears," Holden said. "No one wants to fund litigation or lose a Supreme Court case over gambling."
The First Amendment is being used to protect predatory advertising targeting vulnerable gambling addicts that have a suicide rate five times higher than alcohol & drug addicts?!
That's freedom of expression?!
Per CNN.com:
"In most states, the legal age for sports betting is 21 years old. But ads during games, in stadiums, and with star athlete sponsors normalizes sports betting for kids and teenagers, critics say. The United Kingdom last year banned top athletes and celebrities from appearing in ads endorsing or promoting gambling to try to curb underage gambling. That's unlikely to happen in the United States."
The United States of capitalist excess, exploitation, overconsumption, materialism, consumerism, addictions, compulsions, disordered behaviors, binges, highest individual debt in the world, highest cost of living, glamorizing addictive behavior, spend spend spend, buy buy buy, shop till you drop, money makes the world go round, money buys happiness, retail therapy, hey you never know, publishers clearing house, $100k pyramid, lets make a deal!, dystopian game shows reality shows & competition shows, dying to gamble, dying to win, bankruptcy, foreclosures, repossessions, evictions, overcompensating, impressing people you want to know, kissing ass, keeping up with the joneses, obsessions, adrenaline rushes, vicarious thrills, dying to feel alive, chasing down highs, monotony of modern life, cubicle slave, worker bee, 9 to 5 drudgery, the excitement of winning your parlay, beating the odds, beating the system, coming out on top, becoming a millionaire, quitting your day job, instantaneous wealth, everybody else is doing it, seductive ads, predatory ads, alluring ads, compelling ads, Jamie Foxx, Gronk, Kevin Hart, Draft Kings, FanDuel, hot blondes, Buffalo Wild Wings, filling up your empty existence, finally winning at something, distractions from the constant drudgery of daily life, beating the doldrums, not totally up to luck & chance, using knowledge of football to beat the odds, finally getting rewarded for all these years of being a fan, makes watching the games more interesting, being more invested as a fan, threatening a players life for fucking up your parlay, sending death threats to a running back with a season ending and potentially career altering injury for fucking up your parlay, dehumanization of the players, dehumanization of the self.
Make the NFL plantation 100% white owners richer and richer off of the backs of their 70% black slaves...
Per APA.org:
"People can gamble around the clock from anywhere and, increasingly, at many ages, including teenagers and even young children who are well below the legal age for gambling. Starting young carries a relatively high burden of psychological distress and increased chances of developing problems. The National Institutes of Health has agencies dedicated to problem alcohol use and drug use, but there are no official efforts aimed at problem gambling, and there are no federal regulations against advertisements for sports betting.
An estimated 96% of people with gambling problems have at least one other psychiatric disorder. Substance use disorders, impulse-control disorders, mood disorders, and anxiety disorders are particularly common among people with gambling problems."
The sports betting & fantasy betting ads target and exploit people who already struggle with impulse and self control and encourages them to make risky bets, bet impulsively and to lose whatever self control they have and bet with Draft Kings now now now every play every down how many yards how many catches how many forced fumbles how many interceptions how many pass break up attempts how many first downs how many QB rushes how many QB hurries how many sacks how many tackles for loss.
Every imaginable stat at your fingertips, the NFL's dream, and an addictive bettor's worst nightmare...
Per APA.org, "Vulnerability is high in people with low incomes who have more to gain with a big win."
Targeting the working poor already being exploited by capitalism just like the alcohol, fast food, soda, snacking and credit card rewards companies do.
Per APA.org, "Unlike rewards given after every repetition of a behavior, this type of variable ratio reinforcement, or intermittent reinforcement, exploits a cognitive distortion that makes a gambler view each loss as one step closer to a win and can lead to very rapid adoption of a behavior that can then be hard to extinguish. Animals exhibit the same patterns."
Psychological exploitation, psyops, psychological warfare.
Per APA. org, "As many as 90% or more of people with gambling problems never seek help. Nower has proposed three main pathways that can lead to gambling problems. For one group of people, habitual gambling pushes them to chase wins until they develop a problem. A second group comes from a history of trauma, abuse, or neglect, and gambling offers an escape from stress, depression, and anxiety. A third group may have antisocial or impulsive personalities with risk-taking behaviors."
Recall this from earlier in my article: "An estimated 96% of people with gambling problems have at least one other psychiatric disorder. Substance use disorders, impulse-control disorders, mood disorders, and anxiety disorders are particularly common among people with gambling problems."
And this from the above quote from APA.org: "A second group comes from a history of trauma, abuse, or neglect, and gambling offers an escape from stress, depression, and anxiety."
This is a complete and total set up to target vulnerable populations already more susceptible to gambling addictions with predatory ads — the NFL, Draft Kings & FanDuel are partially responsible for the deaths of gambling addicts that are committing suicide at five times the rate of alcohol and drug addicts and they could give a fuck less.
APA.org:
"In 2023, at its peak, according to news reports, the betting platform FanDuel reported taking 50,000 bets per minute. Sports bettors trend young: The fastest-growing group of sports gamblers are between 21 and 24 years old, according to an analysis by Nower's group of data from New Jersey, which legalized sports gambling in 2018. Compared with other kinds of gambling, the in-game betting offered during sports games is highly dependent on impulsivity, Nower said.
There are opportunities to place bets during the game on everything from who will win the coin toss to which quarterback will throw 100 yards first to how long the national anthem will last. And impulsivity is particularly common in younger people and among sports fans caught up in the emotion of a game, Nower said.
About 14% of sports bettors reported thoughts of suicide and 10% said they had made a suicide attempt, she and colleagues found in one New Jersey study."
And gambling addicts have a suicide rate five times higher than alcohol and drug addicts — five times! And the NFL could give less than a fuck.
Per APA.org:
"Because of gambling on mobile phones and tablets, there's no real way to keep children from gambling on their parents', friends', or siblings' accounts. And they're being bombarded with all these advertisements. This is a recipe for problems among a lot of young people."
"We educate our kids in our school systems about alcohol use, drug use, drinking and driving, and unprotected sex," Derevensky said. "It's very difficult to find jurisdictions and school boards that have gambling prevention programs."
The NFL likes to get them while they're young and vulnerable and easy to exploit — just like Pop Warner.
Some observations from NFL Reddit:
"If you just do it on your phone you may not fully appreciate the consequences or realize how much you are actually wagering. At a certain point it just feels like another addicting cell phone game. Which is exactly what the gambling companies want."
"Simmons, etc. frame parlays as a "smart guy" way to play but if you look at it from a business perspective the books have a much higher take rate on parlays which is why they are getting promoted so much. So it's pretty much a lie. But smart gamblers don't do any of the things that would be advised on podcasts. They might sweat individual bets but also generally understand that bad beats are part of life, they are not wagering emotionally on or against teams that they dislike for whatever reason. Also the online books will start limiting you as soon as you win, so it's basically a waste of time if you are trying to be a "smart" gambler..."
This instant gambling, 'take out your phone and bet right now!' ubiquitous exploitative mantra in every ad and during every game is so fucking predatory and exploitative — just like the NFL — who is making billions off of gambling every single season.
For the NFL, the more addicts, the more suicides, the more lives ruined, the better.
More NFL Reddit observations:
"A lot of people consume the NFL through the lens of fantasy (people like to own their friends) and gambling (people like the thrill of winning/losing money), so the NFL is now dependent on those to sustain interest in the sport as a whole. We're going to see more gambling and fantasy content in the future."
"It has increased football's hold on people. Along with fantasy, it's a reason to follow all of the games as opposed to just your team's games."
"I know so many people that would have never gambled if it weren't so accessible and heavily promoted."
"It's ruining sports, it's ruining watching sports with people. We all know guys whose lives basically revolve around their daily bets."
The NFL revels in creating future gambling addicts and future suicides — just like their current players quietly developing CTE and later committing suicide decades after they finish playing.
The NFL makes billions upon billions with online sports betting and fantasy football with an audience mostly made up of men — who develop gambling addictions at double the rate of women — yet they cant significantly and seriously fund any studies on gambling addiction yet gambling addicts commit suicide at five times the rate of alcohol and drug addicts?
$6 million is what the NFL contributed to sports betting research in the same year they made over $3 billion from online sports betting. Do the math.
Just like the NFL's reluctance to acknowledge CTE and fund research into it, the NFL refuses to seriously commit to funding research on gambling addiction because of how massively they are benefitting and profiting from gambling addicts to the tune of billions of dollars a year.
Just like their stance on CTE for decades, the NFL doesn't want to know.
The Supreme Court legalized online sports betting in 2018 and it is legal six years later in over 38 states — legal, instantly accessible on mobile phones, apps and tablets with ubiquitous and predatory ads with ultra famous athletes and celebrities from Gronkowski and Kevin Hart to pregame analysts endlessly spouting off about parlays, prop bets, over/unders, spreads, picks, who's going to score next ad nauseum.
Final NFL Reddit Observations:
"Avoiding your addiction is critical to recovery. By advertising constantly, you are more likely to recapture those recovering addicts. Gambling is a psychological addiction so the advertising component is more important."
"I'm sick to fucking death of how sports betting, gambling is spreading like herpes. I didn't have particularly strong feelings until I saw one commercial whose eyes literally lit up with pleasure on opening some gambling app. Something about this new sports betting world arouses such disgust in me I can barely speak. It's spreading into paid partnerships where just using an app 'unlocks' some bullshit offer to start gambling 'risk free'. By far it's some of the sleaziest, most manipulative marketing I've ever seen and I hate it."
"Sports betting is as addictive as drugs and maybe worse because it's been normalized as a leisure activity and some people are sucked in to the promise of free bets and big payouts."
"Having it available on a device everyone owns that fits in the palm of your hand is terrifying."
"Online gambling is a slippery slope into poverty and despair."
"Without fantasy football, people wouldn't be watching half the games they are. They only watch the games because they have money on them. Suddenly they have skin in the game for teams they'd normally not care about. It's incredibly manipulative."
"The one that really frustrates me is the Jamie Foxx commercial where he's playing a piano and says something like 'You'll be watching every pitch, every run, every lap, every catch now'. I mean right there, they freely admit that gambling can lead to compulsive behaviors."
"These companies are absolutely predatory; they are armed with addiction techniques and scientific studies against people who can't defend themselves. It's psychological weaponry."
"I'm so tired of seeing betting/gambling ads. They've become as pervasive as the drug/pharmaceutical ads."
"EVERY PLAY!! EVERY DOWN!!! BET $5 AND GET $1500 IN BONUS BUCKS!! INSTANTLY!"
Predatory exploitative fucks.
They want people disordered, addictive, compulsive, anxious, depressed, empty, listless, lethargic, impulsive, chasing wins, bored, apathetic, despondent, desperate, money hungry, thrill seeking, adrenaline junkies, high on wins, greedy...
Online sports betting & fantasy betting ads are as predatory, exploitative and ubiquitous as pharmaceutical industrial advertising.
Just as obnoxious and unavoidable. Just as transparent and nauseating. Just as disgustingly disingenuous with their warnings tacked on to the very end whether its medication side effects or gambling addiction helplines.
The NFL makes billions from predatory ads every single season while they continue to create, fuel, worsen & endlessly profit off of gambling addictions.
Per The Washington Post:
"The rapid advance of this technology has allowed gambling operators to figure out a lot about customers - when they bet, how much they bet, whom they bet on - and addiction experts maintain that the companies have a responsibility to use that data to help keep bettors from becoming addicts."
But they don't use the technology and customer data to help bettors from becoming addicts — they use it to send notifications to bettors directly to their cell phones reminding them when its time to place a bet making their gambling addictions even worse.
They want addicts — its best for business.
Just like the alcoholic beverage industry, the vast majority of the money made for both the sports & fantasy online betting industries is made via addicts who overspend.
These industries actively court, lure, seduce, convince and use hypnotic messaging and brainwashing tactics to prey on vulnerable individuals susceptible to addictive behavior as part of their very lucrative and hideously disingenuous, cruel and exploitative marketing plans.
Per The Washington Post:
"On the individual level, operators have enough funds to offer tempting cash bonuses for placing initial bets from new accounts. You certainly don't see that kind of offer for, say, new smokers or new drinkers.
"Think about the ads," Maney said. "Every one of these kids is seeing them Facebook, Instagram, every game you watch. If you're a 12-, 14-year-old - the backdrop is DraftKings. Why wouldn't they gamble?"
From "Sports Gambling: Trading On Americas Addiction To The NFL":
"Revenues in the online sports gambling sector are expected to clock in at roughly $11 billion in 2023, which would represent a 72% increase from 2022. The NFL is America's favorite sports league, which is why the kick-off of the NFL season typically triggers a surge in American sports betting activity.
However, the "house" now extends beyond just sports books - state governments have also horned in on the action - collecting an estimated $3.50 billion in tax-related revenue since the start of 2018 as of 2023.
Not surprisingly, that same research also demonstrated that there's a strong correlation between betting activity and game viewership. For example, survey responses indicated that two-thirds of mobile gamblers were more likely to watch a game they'd wagered on.
That's certainly music to the ears of NFL owners. According to the American Gaming Association (AGA), the NFL collects an extra $2.3 billion per year in revenues due to the advent of widespread, legal sports gambling.
Moreover, an estimated 76% of Americans actively follow the NFL, according to research conducted by Statista. The American Gaming Association (AGA) released the results from a recent survey that indicated upwards of 73 million Americans are likely to make a wager focused on the NFL in 2023. According to AGA data, that figure represents an increase of about 60% from 2022.
Within the online sports gambling industry there's two primary heavyweights - DraftKings (DKNG) and FanDuel. FanDuel accounts for roughly 46% of the market, while DraftKings has 25%. Rounding out the top four are BetMGM and Caesars, which control 12% and 7% of the market, respectively.
As of early September 2023, sports gambling has now been legalized in 38 states and the District of Columbia. Just 10 years ago, that level of penetration in the U.S. market would have seemed unthinkable."
More revenue, more money, more billions, more suicides, more addicts, more divorces, more broken families, more depression, more deaths, more destitution, more ruined careers, more debt, more bankruptcies, more foreclosures, more evictions, more repossessions, more ruined credit, more shame, more impulsivity, more bragging about wins & hiding losses, more rehab, more recovery, more pressure on players, more player injuries, more death threats to players, more dehumanization of players, more revenue for the NFL plantation owners & less money to the slaves playing, more wishing death on players with season-ending injuries who fucked up your parlay, less true fandom, less enjoyment of the game, less fun for players, more exploitation, more manipulation, more predatory, more seductive, more legal, more alluring, more exciting, more reason to watch, more investment in the NFL, more adrenaline rushes, more wins to chase, more opportunities to win back your losses, more child addicts, more addicted teens, more casinos in your pocket, more bets on every play every down every game, more anxiety, more substance use disorders.
More fans dying for their gambling addictions, FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM Casino, Caesars, the NFL owners & Roger Goodell...
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exethworta1975 · 9 months ago
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gehälter nfl
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gehälter nfl
Die Gehaltsstruktur der NFL (National Football League) ist ein faszinierendes Thema, das sowohl Fans als auch Analysten gleichermaßen interessiert. Die Liga, die für ihren enormen finanziellen Erfolg bekannt ist, verfügt über eine einzigartige Gehaltsstruktur, die den Spielern eine beeindruckende Bezahlung ermöglicht.
Die Grundlage der Gehaltsstruktur in der NFL ist der Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), ein Tarifvertrag zwischen der Liga und der Spielergewerkschaft. Der CBA regelt verschiedene Aspekte der Spielerbezahlung, einschließlich Gehaltskappen, Vertragsstrukturen und Bonuszahlungen.
Jedes Jahr gibt es eine Gehaltsobergrenze, die von der Liga festgelegt wird. Diese Grenze begrenzt den Gesamtbetrag, den ein Team für die Gehälter seiner Spieler ausgeben darf. Die Gehaltsobergrenze basiert auf dem Umsatz der Liga und wird jedes Jahr neu verhandelt.
Die einzelnen Spielergehälter können stark variieren. Top-Spieler wie Quarterbacks, Wide Receiver und Defensive Stars verdienen oft beträchtliche Summen, während Spieler in weniger prominenten Positionen in der Regel weniger verdienen. Die Gehälter werden in der Regel durch langfristige Verträge geregelt, die verschiedene Bonuszahlungen und Leistungsanreize enthalten können.
Es ist wichtig zu beachten, dass die Gehaltsstruktur der NFL stark von der der meisten anderen Sportligen abweicht. In der NFL gibt es keine Gehaltsobergrenze für individuelle Spielergehälter. Das bedeutet, dass ein Team einem Spieler einen großen Vertrag anbieten kann, auch wenn dies Auswirkungen auf sein Gehaltsgefüge haben könnte.
Die Gehaltsstruktur der NFL spiegelt den wirtschaftlichen Erfolg der Liga wider und ermöglicht es den Spielern, für ihre Leistungen auf dem Spielfeld angemessen entlohnt zu werden. Sie trägt auch dazu bei, einen fairen Wettbewerb zwischen den Teams sicherzustellen und die wirtschaftliche Stabilität der Liga zu gewährleisten.owiederspiegelt Saisonergebnisse mit Bonuszahlungen.
Insgesamt ist die Gehaltsstruktur der NFL ein komplexes und faszinierendes System, das die finanzielle Seite des professionellen Footballs widerspiegelt. Es ist ein wichtiger Aspekt der Liga, der sowohl für die Spieler als auch für die Teams von großer Bedeutung ist.
Das Durchschnittsgehalt eines NFL-Spielers kann je nach Position, Erfahrung und Leistung stark variieren. Die National Football League (NFL) ist eine der bekanntesten professionellen Sportligen in den Vereinigten Staaten und Spielern bieten sich hier finanziell sehr lukrative Möglichkeiten.
Generell verdienen NFL-Spieler im Durchschnitt ein hohes Gehalt, vor allem im Vergleich zu anderen Sportarten. Laut aktuellen Statistiken beträgt das Durchschnittsgehalt eines NFL-Spielers etwa 2 Millionen US-Dollar pro Jahr. Dabei gibt es jedoch große Unterschiede zwischen den einzelnen Positionen. Quarterbacks, die als Spielmacher eine entscheidende Rolle spielen, verdienen in der Regel am meisten. Top-Quarterbacks können Gehälter von mehreren Millionen Dollar pro Jahr verdienen. Aber auch andere Schlüsselpositionen wie Wide Receiver, Defensive End oder Cornerback werden meist sehr gut entlohnt.
Für junge, unerfahrene Spieler, die gerade erst in die NFL kommen, können die Einstiegsgehälter jedoch niedriger sein. Sie erhalten meist Rookie-Verträge, bei denen das Gehalt die ersten Jahre begrenzt ist. Mit steigender Erfahrung und erfolgreicher Leistung haben sie jedoch die Chance, Verträge mit höheren Gehältern abzuschließen. Für gestandene Spieler mit einer langjährigen Karriere in der Liga können die Gehälter bis zu mehreren zehn Millionen Dollar pro Jahr betragen.
Es ist wichtig zu beachten, dass diese Zahlen Durchschnittswerte sind und von vielen Faktoren abhängen. Neben dem eigentlichen Gehalt können Spieler auch Einnahmen aus Sponsorenverträgen, Werbekampagnen und anderen Quellen generieren.
Alles in allem lässt sich sagen, dass die NFL-Spieler allgemein sehr gut bezahlt werden. Sie sind hochtalentierte Athleten, die auf höchstem Niveau spielen und ihr Gehalt spiegelt oft die harte Arbeit, Leistung und Unterhaltungswert wider, den sie ihren Fans bieten.
Verträge und Gehälter der NFL-Spieler
Die National Football League (NFL) ist für ihre hohen Gehälter und beeindruckende Verträge bekannt. Die Spieler der NFL verdienen im Durchschnitt viel mehr als Sportler anderer Sportarten. In diesem Artikel werfen wir einen genaueren Blick auf die Verträge und Gehälter der NFL-Spieler.
Die NFL-Verträge sind in der Regel äußerst komplex und können mehrere Jahre umfassen. Sie beinhalten oft eine Kombination aus Grundgehalt, Bonuszahlungen und Anreizen für bestimmte Leistungen. Das Grundgehalt ist der Betrag, den ein Spieler unabhängig von seiner Spielzeit oder seinen individuellen Statistiken verdient. Bonuszahlungen können je nach Vertrag für verschiedene Gründe gezahlt werden, wie zum Beispiel Spielleistung, Teamerfolg oder persönliche Auszeichnungen. Die Anreize in einem Vertrag können Spieler dazu motivieren, bestimmte Ziele zu erreichen, wie beispielsweise eine bestimmte Anzahl an Touchdowns zu erzielen oder ein bestimmtes Spielzeitkontingent zu überschreiten.
Die Gehälter der NFL-Spieler variieren stark zwischen den einzelnen Positionen und Spielern. Quarterbacks und vertrauenswürdige Wide Receiver gehören oft zu den bestbezahlten Spielern in der Liga. Die Besten verdienen Millionen von Dollar pro Jahr, während Spieler auf anderen Positionen, wie Offensive Linemen oder Kickern, weniger verdienen.
Spieler, die im NFL Draft ausgewählt werden, erhalten oft hohe Verträge als Teil ihrer Rookie-Verträge. Das Gehalt für Rookie-Spieler ist nicht so hoch wie das für etablierte Profis, aber dennoch beträchtlich im Vergleich zu anderen Berufseinsteigern.
Die NFL-Gehälter haben in den letzten Jahrzehnten erheblich zugenommen, da die Liga immer erfolgreicher wurde und der Umsatz gestiegen ist. Die Spielergewerkschaft der NFL verhandelt im Namen der Spieler, um sicherzustellen, dass sie angemessene Gehälter und Verträge erhalten.
Zusammenfassend lässt sich sagen, dass Verträge und Gehälter der NFL-Spieler sehr komplex sind und von vielen unterschiedlichen Faktoren abhängen. Die Spieler verdienen oft beträchtliche Summen, insbesondere wenn sie zu den besten Spielern ihrer Position gehören. Die Gehälter in der NFL sind ein wichtiger Anreiz für Spieler, ihr Bestes zu geben und das Beste aus ihrer Karriere zu machen.
Die National Football League (NFL) ist eine der beliebtesten Sportligen der Welt und zieht jedes Jahr Millionen von Zuschauern an. Die Spieler der NFL verdienen aufgrund ihrer Leistungen und des hohen Wettbewerbsniveaus sehr hohe Gehälter. In diesem Artikel werfen wir einen Blick auf die Top-4 Teams mit den höchsten Gehältern in der NFL.
Dallas Cowboys: Die Dallas Cowboys sind nicht nur eines der erfolgreichsten Teams der Liga, sondern auch eines der reichsten. Sie haben einen hohen Umsatz und können es sich leisten, ihren Spielern hohe Gehälter zu bezahlen. Mit durchschnittlich $58 Millionen pro Jahr sind die Dallas Cowboys das Team mit den höchsten Gehältern in der NFL.
Kansas City Chiefs: Die Kansas City Chiefs sind bekannt für ihren leistungsstarken Angriff und ihren talentierten Quarterback Patrick Mahomes. Das Team investiert viel in seine Spieler und zahlt ihnen sehr hohe Gehälter. Mit einem durchschnittlichen Gehalt von $54 Millionen pro Jahr landen die Chiefs auf dem zweiten Platz.
Pittsburgh Steelers: Die Pittsburgh Steelers sind eines der dienstältesten Teams in der NFL und haben eine lange Tradition des Erfolgs. Die Steelers haben eine ausgezeichnete Verteidigung und zahlen ihren Spielern entsprechend hohe Gehälter. Sie liegen mit einem durchschnittlichen Gehalt von $53 Millionen pro Jahr auf dem dritten Platz.
Los Angeles Rams: Die Los Angeles Rams haben in den letzten Jahren viel in ihre Mannschaft investiert und einige talentierte Spieler angeworben. Mit einem durchschnittlichen Gehalt von $52 Millionen pro Jahr stehen die Rams an vierter Stelle der Gehaltsliste.
Es ist wichtig anzumerken, dass sich die Gehälter der Spieler im Laufe der Zeit ändern können, da Verträge neu verhandelt und Spieler zu anderen Teams transferiert werden. Die Gehälter in der NFL sind jedoch allgemein sehr hoch, um die Leistungen und das Talent der Spieler angemessen zu honorieren.
Gehaltsunterschiede in der NFL
Die National Football League (NFL) ist die bekannteste American Football-Liga, in der die besten Spieler der Welt ihr Können unter Beweis stellen. In den letzten Jahren gab es vermehrt Diskussionen über die Gehaltsunterschiede innerhalb der Liga. In diesem Artikel gehen wir genauer auf fünf Faktoren ein, die zu den Gehaltsunterschieden in der NFL beitragen.
Erfahrung: Erfahrung spielt eine wichtige Rolle bei der Bestimmung des Gehalts in der NFL. Spieler, die schon längere Zeit in der Liga aktiv sind und dabei gute Leistungen erbracht haben, werden in der Regel höher bezahlt als Neulinge. Erfahrene Spieler verfügen über mehr Fachwissen und sind daher in der Lage, bessere Leistungen zu erzielen.
Position auf dem Spielfeld: Die Position eines Spielers auf dem Spielfeld beeinflusst maßgeblich sein Gehalt. Spieler auf Schlüsselpositionen wie Quarterback, Wide Receiver oder Cornerback erhalten in der Regel höhere Gehälter als Spieler auf weniger wichtigen Positionen wie Offensive Linemen oder Kickern. Die Leistung und Bedeutung der Position für das Team spielen hierbei eine entscheidende Rolle.
Vertragsverhandlungen: Die Gehälter der Spieler werden oft durch Vertragsverhandlungen bestimmt. Agenten und Spielervertreter spielen hierbei eine wichtige Rolle, da sie versuchen, das bestmögliche Gehalt für ihre Klienten herauszuholen. Spieler, die in Verhandlungen geschickt sind oder eine starke Verhandlungsposition haben, können deutlich höhere Gehälter erzielen.
Teamerfolg und Popularität: Der Erfolg des Teams und die Popularität eines Spielers beeinflussen ebenfalls das Gehalt. Spieler, die in erfolgreichen Teams spielen oder besonders beliebt bei den Fans sind, haben oft bessere Chancen auf hohe Gehälter. Erfolgreiche Teams sind bereit, mehr Geld für die besten Spieler auszugeben, um ihre Erfolgschancen zu erhöhen.
Image-Rechte und Sponsorenverträge: Neben dem eigentlichen Gehalt können Spieler auch durch Image-Rechte und Sponsorenverträge zusätzliches Einkommen generieren. Spieler mit einem hohen Bekanntheitsgrad haben oft die Möglichkeit, lukrative Werbedeals abzuschließen. Diese zusätzlichen Einnahmen können zu großen Gehaltsunterschieden zwischen den Spielern führen.
Insgesamt sind die Gehaltsunterschiede in der NFL Ergebnis einer Kombination aus Erfahrung, Position, Vertragsverhandlungen, Teamerfolg, Popularität und zusätzlichen Einnahmemöglichkeiten. Diese Aspekte können dazu führen, dass einige Spieler deutlich höhere Gehälter erhalten als andere. Letztendlich spiegeln die Gehälter in der NFL auch die Wertigkeit und Bedeutung der Spieler für das Team und die Liga wider.
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loupickney · 1 year ago
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What makes sense now might not so much once free agency starts, though with the forthcoming "final year of the CBA" rules going into effect...
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subsidystadium · 2 months ago
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Yet another "historic" community benefits agreement...this time in Chattanooga
In July, the Chattanooga Lookouts, a minor league baseball team, reached an agreement with the city to build a new ballpark. Although the price was originally going to be $79.5 million, the final price tag was actually $120 million. Not to worry, though, as the public contribution amount is capped at…$112 million? Anyway, ever since 2022, local groups in Chattanooga have been pressuring local…
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nfkjasfas · 1 year ago
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Fans should be furious at both the Madden NFL 24 for a premeditated
The contract extended provides that DirecTV will pay a substantial amount if the 2011 season is not cancelled Mut 24 Coins. The fee could be up to 9% more at Madden NFL 24's own discretion in the event that the 2011 season is cancelled. In the event of a total payment in the event of a cancelled season 42% of that fee is not refundable and the rest will be applied for the following season. Op. 27. 71-72; Goodell Direct Test. 11. This means that Madden NFL 24 could get substantially more from DirecTV in 2011 if the company blocks the Players or not.
Wait, what? In essence, in layman's terms this Madden NFL 24 was ready for a lockout and was negotiating its contract with DirecTV in 2008. knowing a work stoppage would likely to occur. The language of the contract made an insurance policy to Madden NFL 24 an insurance policy of a sort, giving the league an ongoing stream of income and a buffer that allowed the owners to keep the lockout in effect for as long as they want to.
Fans should be furious at both the Madden NFL 24 for a premeditated work stoppage as well as DirecTV, for facilitating its support for the Madden NFL 24's plan. DirecTV was in favor of Madden NFL 24. their RedZone Channel and Sunday Ticket as well as Sunday Ticket, and bending to the dictates of the league in the talks in 2008. The league leveraged this to create a situation in which an agreement to lockout the channel would be beneficial for the owners.
Seem fair? It's not fair, of course. If we look at it from an everyday perspective: why does an organization ever get more money for choosing to close down its operations or not? The fact that Madden NFL 24 negotiated its TV contracts in full knowledge of the fact that it was in charge of a stoppage in workand secured streams of income that would last and increase during a lockout -- is the clearest picture we've ever seen of the way in which the Madden NFL 24 planned for the CBA negotiations Buy Madden nfl 24 Coins. It's not pretty.
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tallmantall · 3 months ago
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sportyconnect · 2 years ago
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The 2023 NFL Draft is underway, shaping as much as some of the thrilling drafts in the latest reminiscence. Several gifted gamers can be found, and several other groups want to make an enormous transfer. This is a take a look at a number of the high storylines from the primary spherical of the draft: The Jacksonville Jaguars chose Travon Walker as the primary total choice. Walker is a flexible defensive finish who might be a star for the Jaguars for years. The Detroit Lions chose Aidan Hutchinson as the second total choice. Hutchinson is a dominant cross-rusher who may assist the Lions in enhancing their protection. The Houston Texans chose Derek Stingley Jr. with the third total choice. Stingley is a lockdown cornerback who might be essential to turning across the Texans' protection. The New York Jets chose Garrett Wilson as the fourth total choice. Wilson is a vast dynamic receiver who might be a big-play menace for the Jets. The Carolina Panthers chose Ikem Ekwonu as the sixth total choice. Ekwonu is a flexible offensive lineman who may assist the Panthers in defending their quarterback. The NFL Draft's primary spherical is always enjoyable, and this yr's draft is no exception. Several gifted gamers can be found, and several other groups want to make an enormous transfer. It is going to be a thrilling evening of soccer. High Draft Prospects Listed below are a number of the high draft prospects for the 2023 NFL Draft: Travon Walker, DE, Georgia Aidan Hutchinson, DE, Michigan Derek Stingley Jr., CB, LSU Garrett Wilson, WR, Ohio State Ikem Ekwonu, OT, NC State Jermaine Johnson II, DE, Florida State Kyle Hamilton, S, Notre Dame Charles Cross, OT, Mississippi State Chris Olave, WR, Ohio State These gamers are all potential first-round picks and will considerably influence their respective groups. Commerce Watch Several groups might be trying to commerce up or down within the draft. Listed below are just a few of the groups to look at: New York Giants: The Giants have two first-round picks, so they may use one to maneuver up and choose a quarterback. Denver Broncos: The Broncos want a quarterback, so they may commerce as much as choose one of many high prospects. New Orleans Saints: The Saints want to rebuild and will commerce down to amass extra picks. Washington Commanders: The Commanders want a large receiver, so they may commerce as much as choose one of many high prospects. Philadelphia Eagles: The Eagles are always trying to make a transfer and will commerce up or down within the draft. Conclusion The 2023 NFL Draft is shaping into some of the most thrilling drafts in the latest reminiscence. Several gifted gamers can be found, and several other groups want to make an enormous transfer. It is going to be a thrilling evening of soccer. FAQs Who're the highest five prospects in the 2023 NFL Draft? The highest five prospects in the 2023 NFL Draft are: Travon Walker, DE, Georgia Aidan Hutchinson, DE, Michigan Derek Stingley Jr., CB, LSU Garrett Wilson, WR, Ohio State Ikem Ekwonu, OT, NC State Which groups are most probably to commerce up or down within the draft? The groups which are most probably to commerce up or down within the draft are: New York Giants Denver Broncos New Orleans Saints Washington Commanders Philadelphia Eagles What are a number of the most fantastic storylines heading into the draft? Among the most fantastic storylines heading into the draft embody: The battle for the primary total choose The necessity for quarterbacks within the first spherical The potential for trades The influence of the brand-new CBA on the draft What are some of the greatest surprises that would occur within the draft? Among the greatest surprises that would occur within the draft embody: A quarterback is not being chosen within the first spherical A large receiver is selected with the primary total c
hoose A staff buying and selling as much as they choose What are some of the greatest surprises that would occur within the draft? Among the greatest surprises that would occur within the draft embody: A quarterback shouldn't be chosen within the first spherical. That is unlikely. However, it's attainable that a staff may determine to attend till later in the draft to deal with the quarterback place. A large receiver is chosen with the prior total selected. That is additionally unlikely. However, it's attainable that a staff may decide on a large receiver with the total primary choice if they imagine that the participant is generational expertise. A staff is buying and selling as much as chooses a particular participant. That is always attainable and may occur if a team is involved in a selected participant. The 2023 NFL Draft is shaping as much to be thrilling, with several storylines to regulate. Seeing how issues play out on draft evening will probably be fascinating.
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nfliplnews · 2 years ago
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[ad_1] How NFL draft picks are compensated drastically changed with the 2011 collective bargaining agreement (CBA). A rookie wage scale, which reduced salaries for early first-round picks, was implemented. The 2020 CBA made minor tweaks to the system. All contracts for draft choices are four years in length under the rookie wage scale. Four-year deals in the first round before the rookie wage scale were virtually nonexistent. Most first-rounders got five-year deals, except quarterbacks taken early in the draft. For example, Matthew Stafford and Sam Bradford, who were selected first overall in 2009 and 2010 respectively, both signed six-year contracts. Teams have an option for a fifth year with first-round picks that must be exercised after the third year of the rookie contract. The period for exercising fifth-year options begins after a player's third NFL regular season ends. These options must be picked up prior to May 3. The timing for when draft picks could sign contract extensions also changed. Draft pick contracts can't be renegotiated until the conclusion of a player's third NFL regular season. This means 2020 draftees became eligible to sign extensions after the 2022 regular season ended on Jan. 8, 2023. First-round pick contract extension timing The 2023 season isn't a contract year for 2020 first-round picks if the option for a fifth year was exercised. Rookie contracts for first-round picks expire after the 2024 season in these cases. Because of this, only a few first-round picks sign multiyear extensions before the start of, or early in, their fourth NFL season. Since 2011 first-round picks initially became eligible for new deals in 2014, just 26 first-rounders have signed extensions within this time frame. The yearly breakdown is as follows: 2011 4 2012 3 2013 5 2014 0 2015 1 2016 3 2017 6 2018 3 2019 1 Average 2.89 During the nine times first-round picks have been eligible for extensions (2014 through 2022), an average of 2.89 players per year received new deals after three years. Vita Vea, the 12th overall pick in the 2018 draft, isn't included as the Buccaneers defensive tackle didn't sign a new deal until a day before the 2021 regular season ended. Surprisingly, none of the 2014 first-round picks signed extensions in 2017 despite containing NFL Defensive Player of the Year award winners, defensive tackle Aaron Donald and edge rusher Khalil Mack. Donald held out from the Rams for most of the preseason trying to get a new deal before returning to play under the fourth year of his rookie contract. The high water mark for early first-round pick extensions was in 2020. Six 2017 first-round picks with options exercised didn't play the fourth season under their rookie contracts because extensions were signed. Broncos offensive tackle Garett Bolles, whose fifth-year option was declined, has been excluded. His deal came 10 games into Denver's 2020 regular season. Less than half of the 32 NFL teams have done an early first-round pick extension since 2014. The 14 teams and the number of extensions are below. Rams 4WR Tavon Austin, QB Jared Goff, RB Todd Gurley, EDGE Robert QuinnCowboys 3RB Ezekiel Elliott, C Travis Frederick, OT Tyron SmithTexans 3EDGE Whitney Mercilus, QB Deshaun Watson, DE J.J. WattBills 2QB Josh Allen, CB Tre'Davious WhiteCardinals 2CB Patrick Peterson, QB Kyler MurrayChiefs 2OT Eric Fisher, QB Patrick MahomesEagles 2OT Lane Johnson, QB Carson WentzPanthers 2LB Luke Kuechly, RB Christian McCaffreyBears 1OG Kyle LongBrowns 1EDGE Myles Garrett Dolphins 1QB Ryan TannehillLions 1C Frank RagnowRaiders 1OT Kolton MillerRavens 1CB Marlon HumphreySurprisingly, the Rams lead the way with four extensions given their recent philosophy of "F them picks." This number isn't going to change anytime soon. The Rams haven't had a first-round pick since Jared Goff in 2016 and don't have another one until 2024. The extensions have skewed toward offensive players by slightly more than a 2:1 margin. Only eight of the extensions have gone to defensive players while 18 have been to those on the offensive side of the ball. A positional breakdown is below. QB7OT4CB3EDGE3RB3C2DT1LB1OG1WR1An emerging trend is to extend the contracts of quarterbacks early. Overall, seven quarterbacks have gotten early extensions. Six of the seven deals for passers have been in the previous four eligible draft classes (2016 through 2019 first-round picks). There haven't been any first-round safeties or tight ends to get new deals after three seasons. The extension opportunities are particularly limited with tight ends. Only eight tight ends were first-round picks from 2011 through 2020. 2020 first-round early extension candidates No player from the 2020 first round has signed a multiyear extension so far this offseason. The Packers quarterback Jordan Love did a one-year, $13.5 million contract extension worth up to $22.5 million through salary escalators before the deadline to pick up his fully guaranteed $20.272 million fifth-year option. Love is making $7.5 million more this year than he was scheduled to in the fourth year of his rookie contract. Based on history, three 2020 first-round picks should get new deals before the regular season starts in September. The season opener for most NFL teams is on Sunday, Sept. 10. The most logical candidates to get early extensions are below. No. 1 overall Pick: QB Joe Burrow, Bengals It's just a matter of time before Burrow signs a contract extension. Reports first surfaced in January prior to a divisional playoff game against the Bills about the Bengals making a new Burrow deal an offseason priority. It's practically a foregone conclusion that the Bengals will make Burrow the league's highest-paid player. That's currently Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, who recently signed a five-year, $260 million deal averaging $52 million per year. There are $185 million of overall guarantees in the contract where $135 million is fully guaranteed. The $135 million fully guaranteed at signing includes an NFL record $72.5 million signing bonus. Burrow has put himself in the league's best quarterback conversation with his consistent play over the last two seasons. He led the NFL with a 70.4 completion percentage while throwing for 4,611 yards and 34 touchdowns to post a 108.3 passer rating in 2021. The Bengals ended a 31-year postseason victory drought before losing to the Rams in Super Bowl LVI. Burrow garnered his first Pro Bowl selection in 2022 while throwing a career-high 35 touchdown passes. He had 4,475 passing yards and a 100.8 passer rating. Cincinnati's five playoff wins over the last two seasons with Burrow under center are as many as the 55-year-old franchise had in the first 52 seasons. The Bengals will surely need to establish a new contract precedent by giving Burrow traditional salary guarantees in order to get a deal done. Cincinnati is in the dark ages when it comes to structuring contracts for veteran players. The only guaranteed money in Cincinnati veteran contracts is a signing bonus and a roster bonus payable within a few days of signing. The bigger deals contain a third or fifth day of the league year roster bonus in the second and third years. The roster bonuses are supposed to be substitutes for additional contract guarantees. The overall guarantees in Bengals contracts are less than comparable deals on other teams. The Bengals seemingly have been preparing to give Burrow a contract with a conventional structure. The naming rights to Paul Brown Stadium were sold to Paycor, a Cincinnati-based company specializing in human resources software last August. Additional team sponsors have also been added. These moves will make it easier for the Bengals to comply with the NFL's archaic funding requirements that should come into play for a Burrow contract. Teams are essentially required to put into an escrow account the amount of any guarantees in a contract other than those just for injury, including ones in future contract years. No. 6 overall pick: QB Justin Herbert, Chargers Chargers head coach Brandon Staley described negotiations with Herbert's camp as "ongoing" in early June at the team's charity golf tournament. Herbert didn't dismiss a "hold in" if he doesn't have a new deal by the start of training camp in late July. When asked about the possibility during the Chargers' mandatory minicamp, which was held in the middle of June, Herbert's response was "we'll see." A hold in is when a player reports to training camp to avoid a fine for being a no show, which would be $40,000 per day in Herbert's case, where there isn't participation in practice until a new contract is done. Herbert is arguably the league's most prolific passer at the start of a career. He threw for a rookie-record 31 touchdowns and 4,336 yards (second most for a rookie) in 2020 to garner NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year honors. Herbert's 14,089 passing yards are the most ever in a quarterback's first three NFL seasons. He has 94 touchdown passes, the second most ever during the first three years, along with 35 interceptions. Herbert's individual achievements haven't translated to team success. The Chargers are 25-24 in the 49 games Herbert has started, and he made the playoffs for the first time in his career last season. An AFC wild card playoff game was lost to the Jaguars 31-30 after blowing a 27-point lead. The lack of team success is unlikely to affect Herbert financially. The Chargers will have a hard time justifying to Herbert that he shouldn't be the NFL's highest-paid player when edge rusher Joey Bosa was put at the top of the non-quarterback pay scale in 2020. Bosa received a five-year, $135 million extension averaging $27 million per year in his contract year. The deal had a player-friendly structure. Bosa's $102 million in overall guarantees and $78 million fully guaranteed at signing were both the most ever in an NFL contract for a non-quarterback. Bosa was 2016's NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year. He was named to the Pro Bowl once (as a starter) in his first three NFL seasons, just like Herbert. Durability was a concern with Bosa, which isn't the case with Herbert. He hasn't missed any games since becoming the Chargers' starting quarterback in the second week of his rookie year. Should Herbert become the league's highest-paid player, it might only be for a short period of time. His deal would likely serve as the salary floor for Burrow by signing first. No. 22 overall pick: WR Justin Jefferson, Vikings Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensa called a Jefferson contract extension a high priority during his NFL Combine press conference at the end of February. That's because nobody has ever had a more productive start to an NFL career at wide receiver than Jefferson. He has 324 receptions for 4,825 yards and 25 touchdowns during his first three seasons. Jefferson's 128 catches and 1,809 receiving yards not only led the NFL last season but are the seventh- and sixth-best single-season totals in league history. He was named 2022's NFL Offensive Player of the Year and earned All-Pro honors for a third straight year because of his efforts. His 96.5 receiving yards per game are the most in NFL history. The real question is whether Jefferson becomes the league's highest-paid non-quarterback or just the league's highest-paid wide receiver. Tyreek Hill set the wide receiver market after he signed a four-year, $120 million extension averaging $30 million per year in March 2022 as a part of his trade from the Chiefs to the Dolphins. The extension has $72.2 million in guarantees where $52.535 million was fully guaranteed at signing. Realistically, Hill has a three-year extension for $75 million because of $45 million in 2026, the final contract year. The Vikings could claim that Cooper Kupp is really the league's highest-paid wide receiver because Hill's deal is misleading due to the artificially inflated salary at the back of his contract specifically included for cosmetic purposes. Kupp signed a three-year, $80.35 million extension with the Rams averaging $26,783,333 per year last June. The deal has a wide receiver record $75 million in guarantees, of which $35 million was fully guaranteed at signing. There is precedent for a wide receiver being the league's highest-paid non-quarterback. It has happened on four occasions since the 2011 CBA was ratified with Larry Fitzgerald (Cardinals), Calvin Johnson (Lions), DeAndre Hopkins (Cardinals) and Hill in 2011, 2012, 2020 and 2022 respectively. The current benchmark for non-quarterbacks is Rams interior defensive lineman Aaron Donald. The three-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year signed a three-year, $95 million contract averaging $31,666,667 per year last June. No. 17 overall pick: WR CeeDee Lamb, Cowboys Contract extensions for core players -- cornerback Trevon Diggs, wide receiver CeeDee Lamb and quarterback Dak Prescott -- are on the Cowboys' radar screen. Cowboys chief operating officer and executive vice president Stephen Jones indicated earlier in June he would like to get at least one of the players signed to a new deal should the opportunity arise. Lamb has expressed a desire for a new contract. He indicated he isn't going to let the prospect of an extension become a distraction. Lamb had career bests of 107 receptions, 1,359 receiving yards and nine touchdown catches last season in his first year as Dallas' clear-cut No. 1 option in the passing game. A new deal will certainly be more than the $20 million per year the Cowboys gave Amari Cooper, who they traded to the Browns last year, in 2020. Cooper's deal contained $60 million of guarantees where $40 million was fully guaranteed at signing. Lamb could top $25 million per year given the deals signed by A.J. Brown, Terry McLaurin, DK Metcalf and Deebo Samuel in 2022 when heading into the final year of their respective rookie contracts. The range for these four deals was between $23.2 million per year and $25 million per year. The Commanders gave McLaurin a three-year, $69.6 million extension with just over $53 million of guarantees last July. The deal is worth as much as $70.6 million through salary escalators and incentives. Brown signed a four-year, $100 million extension containing slightly more than $57 million of guarantees in connection with his trade from the Titans to the Eagles during the first round of the 2022 NFL Draft. 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