Skip to Main Navigation

The Buffalo News

Web Search
by YAHOO! SEARCH

Gleason: Routs expose defects in NFL product

Published:October 30, 2009, 2:02 AM

Font Size:
  • E-mail
  • Share
  • Print

Updated: July 8, 2010, 10:52 PM

Exact numbers weren't available, but estimates from Las Vegas had casinos losing some $10 million combined last Sunday after gamblers wagered on heavy favorites in a stream of blowouts. Apparently, it was the worst day on record for bookmakers when it came to the NFL.

Nobody should sympathize with the gambling industry given how much dough it raked in over

the years from degenerates who thought they could somehow beat the system. For decades,

oddsmakers were so accurate when setting betting lines that you couldn't help but wonder if

games were fixed. It's one reason why people shouldn't bet.

Along came Black Sunday in Vegas.

Three games did the most damage. New England was a 15-point favorite over Tampa Bay

and won, 35-7. Indianapolis was giving 14 against St. Louis and rolled, 42-6. Green Bay was

favored by nine and pounded Cleveland, 31-3.

"I can't remember a year when there's been such a disparity between the top-echelon teams

and the lower rung," Tony Sinisi, odds director for Las Vegas Consultants, said by telephone

earlier this week. "It's uncharted waters for us as lines-makers to have such a huge

difference, a huge gap."



Check the scores. NFL parity, among other things, is a myth.

For a league that prides itself on its level playing field, the divide between the best and

worst teams couldn't be greater. Forget win-loss records and examine the quality of play on

any given Sunday. The NFL has weakened in recent years, confirming its greatest asset is a

marketing machine that sells mediocrity or worse.

Is it me or is the NFL not nearly as interesting as it was years ago? The best coaches

aren't coaching. Unprepared rookies are rushed into action to justify ridiculous contracts

because the league lacks a rookie salary cap. Free agency has created a disconnect between

players and fans, even in their home cities.

The Philadelphia-Washington game was dreadful. If you weren't a Buffalo or Carolina fan,

the Bills-Panthers game was enough to make you crave Oakland visiting Cleveland in late

December. It has been one brutal game after another. Luckily, a new super Walmart near my

house will divert my attention this weekend from Cleveland-St. Louis.

"You have some really bad teams in the NFL. That's the problem," Las Vegas Hilton sports

book director Jay Kornegay said. "This year, there are so many teams with poor quarterback

play, too many teams with poor generals. These teams can't compete when their defenses are on

the field all the time. It's three-and-out or a turnover."



Sound familiar? Funny, but he was making a general statement about the league. Teams with

quarterbacks among the top eight in NFL passer ratings had a combined a 37-8 record. Teams

with quarterbacks in the bottom eight were 10-36. Teams in the middle create the illusion of

strong competition.

Intelligent fans know better. Take the Bills. Their record shows they're 3-4 this season

after two straight road victories, but they're not kidding anyone. It's a terrible team with a

terrible quarterback situation, a terrible run defense and a terrible coach. Their record

merely shows that, in three games, they were less terrible than their opponents.

"Sometimes, you can be 3-4 and be entertaining," Sinisi said. "I don't think that's the

case with your Bills."



Ouch. I would bet the house on my inbox being overloaded with stick-to-hockey e-mails from

fans flagging me for unnecessary roughness. Fire away, but my beef isn't with the Bills alone

or the blowouts last weekend. It's with an inferior product in an overpriced league that

somehow remains a sports superpower.

You know who's losing the most? It's not Vegas or the NFL. It's you.

Comments

There are no comments on this story.

The Feed / What’s Happening Now

Latest Updates
Most Commented
Most Viewed
City & Region

What to do with an empty hospital?

Jerry Sullivan

Hall vote deepest cut for Reed

City & Region

Catholic institutions here cover birth control

Sabres & NHL

Sabres offense on a mini hot streak

City & Region

'Biggest Loser' creates a big win

East Side

Police raids target massive drug ring

Courts

Man who drove into Amherst fire hall over summer arraigned

Student illnesses in Le Roy

Answers to the many questions in Le Roy

East Side

Man killed in attempted robbery on Deerfield Street

City of Buffalo

Judge rules against unions in latest wage freeze fight

Newsroom Tips

Have a news tip you think The Buffalo News should investigate?

Call The News tip line at 849-4475 or email us at investigations@buffnews.com.

All calls and emails will be kept confidential.

Buffalo Marketplace

Marketplace videos

Watch the latest offers, products and services from our advertisers.

Browse our print ads

It's the ultimate advantage for Buffalo consumers. Never miss another ad again!

Buffalo Savers: coupons

Buffalo coupons at your fingertips.
Just click and print. It's Easy!

close

Browse our print adsclose

Special Sections

Buffalo Saversclose

Local coupons

Featured coupon

Latest Blogs

Prep Talk

Friday Night Live: McKinley at East and your #preptalkscores

Gusto

Midnight movies: New film series at the Market Arcade

SulliView

A poignant 'Arab Spring' image is the World Press photo of the year

BillBoard

Gronkowski undergoes ankle surgery

Campus Watch

UB to play at Ohio State in 2013