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Law and Order: NFL

17
Vote

by user CurlyW

In the court of public opinion NFL players are represented by two separate but equally important groups: the police who investigate crime and the media outlets who prosecute the offenders. These are their stories.

The rash of player arrests in the NFL this season are threatening to become to pro football what steroids is to Major League Baseball. At least, that's what the media would have you think.

The sportscasters never tire of pointing out that there have been 35 NFL player arrests this season. This statistic is often trotted out in articles written around the "Omigosh! Player arrests are out of control! The NFL is a lawless den of knaves! Stop them, Roger Goodell!" In my opinion, all the hype around player misdeeds is way overblown. Don't get me wrong, players who break the law should face the consequences, but we should take a closer look at the true gravity of the situation before we write the NFL off as a rogue's gallery.

There are 32 NFL teams, and each team is allowed 53 players during the regular season. This works out to 1,696 players. 35 arrests out of the total player universe works out to just 2% of the league. This number is actually less when you account for repeat offenders like Cincinnati's Chris Henry, who has been arrested four times in the last 13 months. If even two percent of the league sounds high, consider that this is only half the arrest rate of the overall population of the United States.

According to the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting Program, there were an estimated 14,094,186 arrests (not including traffic offenses) in the United States in 2005. This works out to a rate of 4,761.6 arrests per 100,000 inhabitants, or 4.7% of the population. To continue the statistical onslaught, consider that nearly all NFL players are between the ages of 21 and 39. In 2005 there were 3,869,520 arrests of males in that age range, or 27% of all arrests. Keep in mind that 76.2% of all persons arrested in 2005 were male.

So what? The statistics prove what everyone knows: young males, of which NFL players are a subset, are the most oft-arrested group in America. If 2% of NFL players getting arrested in a season is considered a crisis situation by the Commissioner...there could be worse problems in life. So what am I saying- boys will be boys? Well, kind of.

This brings us back to the old saw that professional athletes in general, and football players in particular, should be held to a higher standard. The most oft-cited reason for these elevated expectations is that NFL players are paid much more than most people, and therefore ought to be held more accountable. Really? I dunno. NFL players make a lot of money, but their impact on the overall welfare of society is minimal. After all, NFL players aren't responsible for people's paychecks or retirement security. They don't send Americans off to war or perform open-heart surgery. There are wrongdoers in this world who make a great deal of money and pay a heavy price (see Skilling, Jeffrey) but the severity of society's scorn is based on the devastating effect of their acts on society itself. So the money is largely irrelevant outside of the larger concept of societal importance.

This brings us to the second argument for higher standards of conduct for NFL players. Pro athletes are not critical to society's survival but they are an important component of our collective self-esteem and the human hunger for myth. The Greeks had Zeus; we have Peyton Manning. It's all the same: society needs larger-than-life figures to inspire us and distract us from our troubles. NFL players are elevated to Olympus by a 24-hour media machine of NFL Network, ESPN, Madden NFL 2007, Fantasy Football, etc. Many of them have had their egoes stoked from the time they were teenagers by overzealous parents, scouts and the big-money College Football juggernaut. They're told that they're stars and given a shitload of money...is it any wonder that they sometimes think they're invincible?

It's a bit simplistic to regard the arrests in this year's NFL as some sort of shocking development. These are young men doing what many of their peers are doing...making mistakes and doing boneheaded things sometimes. The difference is that NFL players get fined and suspended while other young men end up on COPS for our entertainment. Society has the right to expect citizens to follow the rule of law and he justice system has the obligation to hold wrongdoers accountable. Zeus may have been beyond reproach, but NFL players are not. After all, they are only human.

This article was originally published at The Curly R: A Washington Redskins Blog

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Bball3345Draft Pick
1105 days ago
Score 4+-
Nicely done. Good job of actually using intelligence and facts. Great rebuttal to the media that is always trying to make a story out of everything.
Permalink | Reply
TartanVarsity Captain
1105 days ago
Score 3+-
Best article in quite some time
Permalink | Reply
JoebookRed-Shirting
1105 days ago
Score 2+-
Agree, and agree.
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ChristofMVP
1105 days ago
Score 0+-
I say, send the players to jail for a day or two. Have them room with the "sisters". Once the player is released, he can tell everyone in the locker room about his "experience." That will cut down on the arrest rate!
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Alex HolowczakHall of Famer
1105 days ago
Score 0+-
To be fair, it is the NFL Players' responsibility to set an example to the people watching, particularly the children. The children will in future idolise their heroes and if they misbehave, so will the next generation of people. So something has to be done to stop the NFL Players setting a bad example. It is certainly a big deal. You cannot say that just because more people do it in the real world makes it acceptable on a smaller scale in the NFL. 2% of NFL Players is still 2% too much.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
1104 days ago
Score 0+-
Fair enough, but why do they have more of a responsibility than any of the rest of us to avoid bad behavior just because they are athletes? Isn't the entire basis of morality how you behave when no one is looking? If that's the case, we shouldn't hold athletes to a higher standard just because more people, children or otherwise, might be watching.
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BU ICEMANJV Squad
1104 days ago
Score 0+-
Very well written, very logical. This is a fantastic article and a great contribution to the site. Awesome job CurlyW. I think you should watch out though, Zeus might be a little peeved that you compared him to Peyton Manning rather than Philipp Rivers or LaDanian Tomlinson. He's definitely a (lightning) Bolts fan!
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