2015 NFL Thread
#221
Posted 2015-December-31, 14:35
The big problem the doctor/scientist faced was when he tried to be a politician rather than just a science guy. It is a common problem. He tried to make policy based on the his findings rather than just do the science. He is a very good scientist...a lousy politician.
#222
Posted 2016-January-04, 07:52
Cyberyeti, on 2015-December-28, 19:42, said:
From the Packers PoV.
Win and host Seattle
Lose and go to Washington
Which do you prefer ?
A home game is big $$. Winning is secondary.
-gwnn
#223
Posted 2016-January-04, 08:40
billw55, on 2016-January-04, 07:52, said:
Not quite.
http://www.forbes.co...ches-for-teams/
It's not big $
#224
Posted 2016-January-04, 09:19
Cyberyeti, on 2016-January-04, 08:40, said:
I am not able to read that link, but if it says that a home game is not a money maker for an NFL team, I have a hard time believing that.
-gwnn
#225
Posted 2016-January-04, 09:50
billw55, on 2016-January-04, 07:52, said:
AFAIK the NFL teams make huge money from the TV deals (and the salary cap goes up as the TV deals go up). They all split this revenue equally. They also split merchandise revenues with the exception of THE COWBOYS (jerry jones elite businessman!)
I am not sure how game tickets work but I believe they are split somehow also. Of course hosting a playoff game/superbowl can be very good for a cities economy I'm sure since you get a lot of out of town people coming in and spending money locally, but I don't think teams directly make money from hosting playoff games.
#226
Posted 2016-January-04, 10:42
PhantomSac, on 2016-January-04, 09:50, said:
I am not sure how game tickets work but I believe they are split somehow also. Of course hosting a playoff game/superbowl can be very good for a cities economy I'm sure since you get a lot of out of town people coming in and spending money locally, but I don't think teams directly make money from hosting playoff games.
Don't know for sure, but I would guess that ticket revenue is split somehow, while concessions, alcohol, parking, and some other types of in-stadium sales are kept by the home club. That's no chump change.
-gwnn
#227
Posted 2016-January-05, 22:23
The Patriots had the fewest fumbles of any NFL offense.
The Patriots had the best fumble rate of any NFL offense.
The Patriots had one of their best fumble rates of the past decade.
bed
#228
Posted 2016-January-06, 08:06
billw55, on 2016-January-04, 09:19, said:
Extract:
"The NFLs socialist model continues in the playoffs. Playoff home teams in baseball, basketball and hockey keep anywhere from 50% to 100% of ticket revenues, depending on the sport and the number of games in the series. In football, all gate receipts flow to the league."
#229
Posted 2016-January-06, 22:14
I would think at some point you can pipe in crowd noise(it had been done in the past) CGI the crowd shots and mount the whole game on an indoor tv set. Save the cost of a billion buck stadium and parking lot, maintenance expense times 32 teams. There is talk of moving 3 teams to LA but who knows in time move all 32 to the tv production capital.
Keep in mind there is only about 12 minutes of actual football play, the rest of the game is filler to sell stuff.
#230
Posted 2016-January-07, 08:10
Cyberyeti, on 2016-January-06, 08:06, said:
"The NFL's socialist model continues in the playoffs. Playoff home teams in baseball, basketball and hockey keep anywhere from 50% to 100% of ticket revenues, depending on the sport and the number of games in the series. In football, all gate receipts flow to the league."
Ah, interesting, good to know.
Still, there are other revenue streams related to a home game, some of which I mentioned above.
-gwnn
#231
Posted 2016-January-24, 13:57
-- Bertrand Russell
#232
Posted 2016-January-25, 04:27
mgoetze, on 2016-January-24, 13:57, said:
Well you were right in as much as they blamed everyone except the QB, just wrong about which team.
#234
Posted 2016-January-25, 07:28
Cyberyeti, on 2016-January-25, 06:24, said:
In fairness, their best rusher in last season's AFC Divisional game had 7 yards (with a team total of 14) but they still beat the Ravens 35-31. Some might be surprised the Pats tried to run it as often as they did. With a slightly better OLine for pass protection, they may well have forgotten about the ground game completely.
#235
Posted 2016-January-25, 08:35
#236
Posted 2016-January-25, 08:55
Zelandakh, on 2016-January-25, 07:28, said:
I wasn't just talking about the numbers, if Brady's running, it's not a designed run if it goes more than 1 yard (he sneaks but that's about it), it means there's pressure. If nobody else can run more than him, it means he can't reduce that pressure.
#237
Posted 2016-January-25, 09:04
Flem72, on 2016-January-25, 08:35, said:
OK, great defense. Held two of the top offenses in the league to 10 points under their season average.
So, let's imagine they do the same one more time. That would be 21 points for Carolina. Can Denver score 22 points? Carolina's defense is pretty good too, I say no.
-gwnn
#238
Posted 2016-January-25, 10:20
mgoetze, on 2016-January-24, 13:57, said:
Still waiting for the collapse.
It seems Brady has lost his last 5 playoff games against Manning family.
Before internet age you had a suspicion there are lots of "not-so-smart" people on the planet. Now you even know their names.
#239
Posted 2016-January-25, 11:31
andrei, on 2016-January-25, 10:20, said:
It seems Brady has lost his last 5 playoff games against Manning family.
Well, it almost happened. Bombing the field on 4th down like the Packers.
-gwnn
#240
Posted 2016-January-25, 21:11
andrei, on 2016-January-25, 10:20, said:
Don't worry, you'll see it in 2 weeks. Carson Palmer played much the way I expected Peyton Manning to play, and that defense the Broncos ran against the Patriots wouldn't work against the Panthers.
-- Bertrand Russell