Gregg Williams (center) and Johnathan Vilma (left) |
Sadly, NFL players around the league have publicly shared how the Saints' "pay-for-pain" is not the only like system in pro football. Many players have come forward and explained on radio and written interviews how teams use monetary incentives to boost players on-field performance.
Former players Mike Golic and Darren Woodson on ESPN's Mike and Mike radio show tried to make the case that paying their colleagues a few hundred dollars for taking out the opponent's top players was essentially the same as high school or college players being given the increasingly popular helmet stickers for good play. One enormous flaw in this argument is that the stickers are given for good on-field play: a sack, interception or touchdown; but there are no schools that celebrate injuring players on the opposite team by adding a sticker to a kid's helmet. Nor are the student-athletes payed by the high school or university for ending an opponent's game, season or career.
Junior Galette making a little extra cash at the expense of Brett Favre. |
As for the involved parties of "Bounty-Gate," they can expect steep--and deserved--repercussions from the league's office and Commissioner Roger Goodell, who have placed an added importance on player safety. Hall of Fame quarterback Troy Aikman said in an interview a few weeks ago that the NFL would become too violent, as the American public will eventually lose interest a la boxing. America's most popular sport is seems far from extinction, but as players become bigger, faster, and stronger behavior such as that demonstrated by the Saints can not be tolerated if the NFL wishes to remain on top.
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