Reignman wrote:Fairview4Life wrote:Reignman wrote:They are big because they designed a system 20+ years ago that allowed most teams in the league to compete. That allowed fanbases to have hope that "this year could be our year". That lead to more people tuning in, which lead to a HUGE tv deal with amazing gate receipts which the NFL used to market their product on a large scale.
You can go to the boondocks anywhere in North America and you will find NFL fans because they've used their strenght of market share to market their product on a grand scale.
That bolded part does not follow and is not what happened. Local fanbases hoping this year is the year is not why people started watching football on TV in huge numbers. Gate receipts are also only a small fraction of the TV deal in the NFL. They could play in front of an empty stadium and still not worry about profit.
How do you think the NFL got that monster TV deal in the first place? A lot of it is history with football and America, but the NFL did a great job of getting the masses excited. It wasn't always like that, I watched the NFL in the 80's.
The hard cap played a huge role in the NFLs success. If you look at the contenders prior to 1990 and then the turnover of contenders post-1990 there's an obvious difference.
Gambling and fantasy football are the main reason for the NFL's popularity in the past 10-15 years. 10s of billions of dollars are wagered on NFL games around the world every year and the U.S. gambling rate on the NFL is nearly triple the rate of the NBA.
You go to a sports bar and no one gives a damn about NFL players/teams any more... all they care about is the spread. Don't want to go to a bar? NFL Sunday Ticket is the perfect media outlet for these gamblers to watch every game, all the time.
David Stern missed out on this opportunity in the 80s and 90s by scaring the gambling populace way.



























