Bozell & Graham Column: America's Wrong to Love Football?

June 4th, 2016 8:00 AM

Football and its most powerful organization, the National Football League, have faced a serious public-relations problem with concussions. They settled a massive class action suit brought by former members against the NFL (and now there's another former player trying to sue).  Former NFL star Junior Seau committed suicide over it.

Seau shot himself in the chest in 2012 so his brain could be studied.  Hollywood signed up Will Smith to dramatize the story in the movie Concussion, which chided the American love of football. "The NFL owns a day of the week," quipped Albert Brooks, playing forensic pathologist Cyril Wecht. "The same day the Church used to own."

This is a real problem for the NFL. "B" is a former NFL safety with a lengthy and distinguished career. He is also a friend. We spoke with him recently about this. He told us he suffered two concussions, possibly more. How serious is the problem? we asked. His answer was wholly unexpected, and jarring. "If I knew then what I know now, I wouldn't have played in the NFL."  This from a natural athlete who obviously loved his craft.

Count on flower children at NPR to go over the edge with this issue. The problem isn't the size and strength, and therefore power of professional football players. No, it's -- ready? -- the evil game of football itself.

Commentator Frank Deford used to love football, but now he just drops bombs on it. On Wednesday's Morning Edition on National Public Radio, Deford's weekly commentary was titled "What Is Football Doing to Us as a People?" He asked on air "So what is football doing to us as a people? How do we explain an America that, alone in the world, so loves this savage sport?"

This is your taxpayer-funded broadcasting in action: Planned Parenthood selling dead baby parts is just a "women's health" group aiding "medical research," but the NFL is organized savagery.

It's true that America loves not just the speed and grace of the game on offense, but the noisy crunch of the game on defense. Surely, the "savage" nature has increased over the years along with the size and speed of the players on the gridiron. But no one in America is rooting for brain injuries and suicides. It's insulting even to think this.

The left has it out for professional football. Their partisans tried a few years back to give the NFL a permanent black eye with the violent off-the-field domestic-violence offenses of Ray Rice and Adrian Peterson, as if their horrible behavior is the norm in the sport. For the past 15 years there's been an organized campaign to strip "Redskins" from Washington though it's leftists, not Indians who are upset. Now some are using the concussion controversy to talk parents out of letting their children play football altogether.

Deford was encouraged into this commentary by Buffalo Bills general manager Doug Whaley telling a radio station "It's a violent game that I personally don't think humans are supposed to play." He said, "All I could think of was the late comedian Flip Wilson whose favorite punchline was a screech `The devil made me do it!'. Thank you, Satan, I thought."

He finished with the same Satanic shtick: "Notwithstanding whether the damage to the players or the pain they endure -- which I was privileged to suffer once but for a few seconds -- we Americans will not stop adoring football. The devil must make us do it."

This is not the first time Deford has used his NPR perch to trash the game in the most self-righteous terms. In 2013, he talked up getting the kids to drop playing football: "What we're seeing now in football is a definition of manliness that is uber-macho. To be that kind of a man, you must be mean and insensitive," Deford preached. "modern football is so violent, even thuggish, that it can damage your soul as well as your brain."

Once the anti-sports lecture is over, NPR's on to the next "nonviolent" crusade: encouraging the joys of "gender confirmation surgery" (don't call it breast and genital amputation) so that transgendered Americans can feel like their "true selves."