The 2019 NFL Pro Bowl isn’t even over yet and it already
sucks. The NFL Pro Bowl is like a person left on life support for weeks. Even
after the doctors have expressed their opinion that the patient has a zero
percent chance to live, the family still keeps the plug in. There honestly is
nothing more painful than watching tight end Eric Ebron pull out his smart
phone while on the field and start taking a video of himself. Then again,
running backs Saquan Barkley and Alvin Kamara at one point lined up as
defensive ends. Remarkably, Kamara was able to beat out right tackle, Taylor
Lewan, and nearly stripped the ball from quarterback DeShaun Watson. If either
of those examples aren’t bad enough Amari Cooper, who was wide open, just let a
would-be touchdown catch go off his helmet. In short, it’s utterly pathetic.
So pathetic that I have done several things, other than
watch the NFL Pro Bowl:
1. I took a nap.
2. I watched the Cleveland Cavaliers against the
Chicago Bulls (this is pathetic because between both teams they have combined
for 20 wins and 79 losses. The Cavaliers have contributed only 9 of those
wins).
3. Watched Netflix
There are two main reasons why the NFL Pro Bowl is
so bad.
The first, and what has already been briefly
discussed above, is the lack of play. When I finally switched from the Cavs
game to the NFL Pro Bowl, I was amazed – there was an actual tackle. The New
York Jets’ safety, Jamal Adams, tackled Chicago Bears quarterback, Mitchell
Trubisky. However, it was not without, like all plays in the NFL, controversy.
The first piece of controversy is the fact that, apparently, blitzes are not
permitted in the Pro Bowl. Blitzes are only allowed if it is a running play. In
turn, on a pass, at most, a defense is only allowed to rush four defensive linemen.
Furthermore, a defense must line up in a 4-3 formation for the entire game. Luckily,
Jamal Adams blitzed on a flea flicker which is initially a handoff and
therefore a running play. The second issue is that in the NFL Pro Bowl safeties
are not permitted to line up on the line of scrimmage. Here, Jamal Adams, was
lined up on the line of scrimmage, but the refs did not notice, most likely
because they are not used to calling such an anemic, and egregious style of
football. However the NFC Team’s head coach, Jason Garrett, tried to challenge
the play, citing that Adams was on the line of scrimmage. To this viewer’s
delight, the refs confirmed that a play could not be reviewed for Garrett’s
grievance, implying reviewing the play would have only prolonged this
atrocious, dreadful, appalling form of football for one second too long.
The other issue is that the NFL is not a player’s
sport, like the NBA, but is more of a team sport. In other words, fans don’t
typically cheer for a team due to a specific player, but rather they cheer for
a team, because the team represents something about that fan – namely the team
represents that fan’s town, region, home. So when the NFL decided to copy the
NBA so that pro bowl teams would be selected by captains in a fantasy draft
format, it was no surprise that it wouldn’t make a difference in how miserable
the play on the field was. Although their all-star game has little defense too,
the NBA is more interesting in a fantasy draft format because it is a players’
league. Fans watch the NBA more so for a certain player rather than a certain
team. So when Lebron and Curry select their teams, it makes it more interesting
because the league’s best players will be partnered with scorers with whom they
typically are never associated. In the NFL it makes little difference who Deion
Sanders or Jerry Rice (the first fantasy Pro Bowl captains) selected because
even on offense there is little to no effort. Thankfully in 2016 the NFL
announced that the Pro Bowl would return to its old format, in which the AFC
would play the NFC.
Aloha Stadium |
The second issue about the Pro Bowl is its
location. From 1980-2016, save but two years, the game was played in Aloha
Stadium in Hawaii. This was actually pretty cool considering that Hawaii is a
beautiful state, and so even if the game does suck (which it almost always does)
at least a fan got to see cuts of the Pacific Ocean, volcanoes, nice beaches,
and random scenes of people doing the Hula dance. That would all change in 2016
when the league announced that it would be taking the Pro Bowl from gorgeous
Hawaii to the artificially created, swamp drained, beachless, city of hot and
humid Orlando, Florida. The NFL must have forgotten that when it rains in
Florida, it isn’t just a little drizzle but an epic monsoon like atmosphere
that just causes the ground to steam up and become a natural sauna, like it did
this year in 2019 (I’m sure the players loved those “ideal” conditions). To add
insult to injury, Orlando was the best of all the poisons. The NFL was
considering Orlando, Rio de Janiero, Brazil, Houston, and Honolulu.
Camping World Stadium - Orlando, FL |
An evening walk in Rio de Janiero. Eagles fans would be used to it. |
First, the best choice would have been keeping the
Pro Bowl in Honolulu and to at least give the players somewhere nice to visit
before having to “act” like they are playing football. Houston would have been
a malign selection only because most of the players travel there either once a
year or once every few years to play the Houston Texans. The Pro Bowl in Rio de
Janiero just seems like the next Gerard Butler movie to fall in line with his Olympus Has Fallen series. According to
the New York Times, “Brazil’s showcase
city is plagued by a rise in lawlessness reminiscent of its darkest periods in
the 1980s and 1990s.” In 2017 there was an 11 percent rise in murders compared
to 2016. Whether the NFL decided not to move the Pro Bowl for financial or player
safety reasons (I would like to believe the latter but it is most likely the
former), doesn’t matter, it’s just a relief that the NFL’s greedy management
wasn’t able to pull the trigger on that proposition.
Funny enough, it has been cited that in an effort
to bring the NFL to a more international stage, the NFL is contemplating moving
the Pro Bowl to Germany, Mexico or Australia. Like most of the NFL’s efforts to
make the Pro Bowl relevant, this will be a monumental mistake. It’s one thing
to keep the “drunk uncle” of the NFL in its home state (i.e. America), it’s
another theory to parade the “drunk uncle” around and have the thought that
maybe these other nations, who have repeatedly rejected American football, want
to see this poor excuse of not only a sport, but entertainment. More
importantly, if these foreigners do enjoy the Pro Bowl, the NFL might get the
false idea that an NFL franchise could survive overseas. The simple reason for this is the fact that
like Orlando’s other attraction, Disney World, the Pro Bowl isn’t really real
and even less amusing. It is a Luke warm, slow moving, half cousin of football,
better kept hidden from sight.