As someone who has followed pro football for well over 50 years, I believe both dynamics may be in play. One, those who run pro football feel it is in their (financial) self-interest to have an honest game. Two, the infantile American public of the 21st Century may not especially care as long as they are entertained.7DnBrnc53 wrote:This is from a blog called Super Fraud:
Part 1: http://superfraud.blogspot.com/2012/05/ ... s-vis.html
Part 2: http://superfraud.blogspot.com/2012/05/ ... tball.html
Here is a highlight from the second link. RHickok said this:
And, this was the response from the author of this blog, Starcade:"Yes, I basically trust the NFL for a very simple reason. Fixing of the sort you allege cannot possibly go on for very long without being exposed, and the people who run the NFL, whatever else they may be, are intelligent people who are fully aware of that. A serious, well-documented exposure of manipulating outcomes would kill the golden goose. It would destroy the NFL's credibility (which is why Rozelle acted so quickly in the 1962 Hornung/Karras/Lions scandal), it would turn fans away, and it would cost the league millions and perhaps billions of dollars in the long run. It would kill the proverbial golden goose."
Would it kill the golden goose?
To do so, you'd have to make two assumptions of the American public:
First, that they are intelligent enough to "get it".
Second, that they even care.
I don't believe you can go broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people. And as for the second part: TV Guide, just before the 1999 advent of the Million-Dollar Game/Reality Show Era, had a poll asking the people whether they would care about a re-do of the game show scandals of the 1950's.
Fully two out of five said they would not care if the games were rigged.
What makes sports any different? Especially given the allegations and proven accusations and injuries we've learned about in the NFL just in this off-season, how much of "Just entertain me!!" has to be in the blood of the people of this culture to not look seriously at what's really been going on, over and above game-fixing and the like!
I have already written on this subject that large scale fixing over many years without exposure would be impossible. Also, the enormous payoffs it would take makes it unprofitable.