betED.com - View From the Couch - by Gavin McDougald

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We are excited to welcome Gavin McDougald to the writing staff at betED.com !

McDougald became known by his views from 'The Couch' after creating and writing the 'CouchMaster's Corner' section on Canada's Number 1 sports website, TSN.ca and has recently signed on to provide insightful, thought provoking and often strongly opinionated content to the betED.com newsletter & website. As any good writer's work does, McDougald's pieces will likely cause you to question your opinion on the topic he writes on. Whether you agree or disagree, we'd like to hear from you! Drop us a line at rants@betED.com to voice your opinion on one of McDougald's articles or on anything else you read at betED.com!
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A decade ago a major sports media outlet came up with a very novel idea: to give the fan a voice. They - for no good reason - gave it to me. I was perhaps the first professional sports fan.
A lifelong follower of the world of fun and games, I was as opinionated as, well? you are. The only difference being, I was in the right place at the right time.
They hired me to blather on about the concerns from those in the cheep seats, or in my case, from the couch. To protect my identity, and to avoid parental embarrassment, I took on that nickname, Couch, or for formal occasions, CouchMaster.
For whatever reason, after all these years later, I am still paid to prattle on about what I see, hear and occasionally, think. I do think on occasion.
However, mine is a voice in the wilderness. We fans remain all but ignored by those in power in sports. Be it the leagues, the athletes themselves, even the press; the constituency that pays all of their salaries has been all but disregarded.
Never are fans considered when a league is in collective bargaining negotiations with its players. Not once have the fans been asked for their say on any of the major decisions that the sports we love make on our behalf. When was the last time a commissioner in any sport met with those who fill their seats to get their input?
I have heard of it happening only once. Gary Bettman of the National Hockey League met with a pal of mine who was voted the NHL?s, ?Fan of the Year.? He even was allowed to be, ?Commissioner for a Day.? The end result? That league shortly thereafter locked out its players and cancelled an entire season for the first time in North American history.
Let?s hope the other leagues don?t use the NHL as an example ? for anything.
So ? very briefly ? here?s what I think about sports:
 Sports are better on TV than live.
 Sports commentators think, except for a small handful of exceptions, that we are retarded.
 Any sport that needs a judge to decide the winner is not a sport.
 Professional golfers are better athletes than linemen, and linemen are better athletes than me.
 The Olympics are the biggest sporting fraud ever perpetrated, even outstripping international cricket.
 If an athlete acts like an ass, yet it?s entertaining, that?s all part of the game.
 If an athlete acts like an ass, and he or she is a detriment to that sport or team, he or she should be out of the game.
 Finally this ? since it is obvious we sports fans are the most powerful entity in game ? we have to get ourselves together so we can use that power.
We are collectively, without a doubt, on top of the sports food-chain, but for the most part, we?re wasting this great opportunity. We do vote with our remotes on what we want to and what we don?t want to watch. We do get to apply pressure with our wallets by not buying tickets, beer and hotdogs or that latest jersey. In addition, we, on very rare occasions, force players, coaches, GM?s and even ownership changes.
But to truly exercise our power to its fullest extent, the aforementioned leagues, players and media would all be bending over backwards to satisfy us.
Currently they abuse us, and that is what we will have to change.
The action adds to the world of fun and games? attraction, but regardless of how serious a player you are here at betED.com, the essential truth is you, like me, are a sports fan.
That means we are in charge.

Let?s hope the new boss ain?t like the old boss.
Cheers ? Gavin McDougald ? AKA Couch


Remember to drop us a line at rants@betED.com to voice your opinion on one of McDougald's articles or on anything else you read at betED.com !
 

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betED.com - View From the Couch - by Gavin McDougald


NFL = National Fans League - September 14th, 2005



We have all heard that spanning the globe, (duh duh duh duhhhh?), the NFL is the sports league that all others are measured against, but have you ever asked yourself, ?Why that is??
As far as sports writers are concerned, it?s all about the business. Sports writers these days are more accountants than game-guys and gals. Notice lately how most are about as interesting in print as calculator jockeys? They are in person as well if you want to know the truth.
But for we wee little schumucks, what makes the NFL the ?National Fans League? isn?t the dollars and cents. Rather, the NFL has figured out exactly what we want, and they deliver it. Consistently and expertly.
Some would point to the strong home team dedication that stokes the fan?s fire, but that?s not it. Even the NHL?s got that. I?m a huge fan but the closest home team city to me, I wouldn?t visit on a bet. Last time I went to a game there, walking into the stadium I was welcomed with the sight of a woman as old as my Mum, decked out from head to toe in team regalia, staggering around drunk and falling into a ditch. She was one of many.
Not exactly an incentive memory that makes me want to go back.
They do have an unparalleled TV package, cool merchandise, the Super Bowl, even the Super Bowl commercials. Yet all of that combined isn?t what really makes the NFL the ?fans? league.
The NFL presents a very strong public stance against gambling. They have periodic, though not very frequent, PSA?s warning of the dangers of gambling. They refuse to consider putting a team in Las Vegas. They suspended Paul Hornung for the entire 1963 season for gambling.
Yet, all the while, they give gamblers precisely what they want.
The games are played, for the most part, over the weekend, with a kicker game going on Monday night. Perfect structuring for the office pools. Unlike any other sports league anywhere, the NFL mandates that each of the teams provide an accurate injury report the Thursday prior to the games. Supposedly, that?s for the other coaches to know who is and who isn?t performing up to snuff. Not co-ink-a-dink-aly, it gives poolies and betters a wagering deadline and helps you pick the line at sites like betED.com !


The NFL does not talk about the line, but every media outlet does, even those who are partners with the NFL.
Things however are changing. The league is putting a big toe on the gaming bandwagon. On the nfl.com there is an official "Fantasy Football" program sponsored by the league.
Why this first baby step? Perhaps it?s because in 2004 sports bettors wagered $2.1 billion in Nevada's licensed sports books. USA Today estimates that on Super Sunday alone, an estimated $5 billion to $7 billion in legal and illegal wagers changes hands. Their resident line maker, Danny Sheridan, estimates if you take combine all the gambling for all sports, legal and otherwise, the total would be something like $250 billion to $300 billion.
The paper points out that's almost as much as the U.S. defense budget and more than the gross domestic product of Switzerland in 2004.
If there?s money like that out there, you have to know the NFL wants some of it ? considering they are the agency that generates most of it.
Now that they are officially in the game, down the road, who knows what the National Fans League will have in store for us to add to our incentive to bet?
There is only one sure thing you can bet on.
It will work.
Cheers ? Gavin McDougald ? AKA Couch
Remember to drop us a line at rants@betED.com to voice your opinion on one of McDougald's articles or on anything else you read at betED.com !
 
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