Opinion I’ve been a football fan most of my life. But I can’t watch anymore


Essay by Thomas Lake, CNN
Updated: Sun February 11, 2024

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CNN's Thomas Lake: "No matter how much I missed football, football did not miss me."

Editor’s Note: This piece was originally published in November 2022. Thomas Lake’s views on football have not changed.

On Saturday afternoon, as third-ranked Georgia played top-ranked Tennessee in the game of the year so far in college football, I was not watching.

In past years I would’ve been on the couch with my brother, eating pizza and wings, bellowing at the television. Instead I got in the minivan with my wife and kids, and we drove to Zoo Atlanta.

We got there a few minutes before kickoff, when a lot of people were leaving. Who goes to the zoo during the Georgia game? We do, as it turns out, along with an Amish family, the women in bonnets, the men in straw hats.

It was a warm and cloudy afternoon, with yellow leaves falling from the pecan trees. A zookeeper told us there are 100,000 muscles and tendons in an elephant’s trunk. I texted my brother to say I was sorry.

“I miss you,” I wrote. “This is just a thing I’m trying.”

There were lions on a rock, all brothers, we were told, and two were asleep, and the third stood at the edge of the rock, and he kept roaring. It was a lonely sound. We walked away but kept hearing that distant, lonely roar.

I could imagine the sound of the crowd, the brass of the band, the beat of the drums, the feeling that I was a part of something, a joyous participant in one of our nation’s last unifying rituals. A sport both uniquely American and intrinsically violent.

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An overview of Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia, during Saturday's game between the University of Georgia Bulldogs and the University of Tennessee Volunteers.

I still remember when Tim Krumrie’s leg shattered. I was eight years old, watching Super Bowl XXIII at my grandparents’ house, and Krumrie, a defensive lineman for the Cincinnati Bengals, stepped the wrong way while trying to make a tackle and suffered a compound fracture. They showed the replay on TV, and we saw the leg shatter again.

The game went on. The game always goes on. That was the lesson I learned as an 8-year-old. Nothing will ever stop the game.

My brother and I were watching two years later when Bo Jackson, one of the greatest athletes of all time, had his left hip dislocated and fractured during a playoff game against the Bengals. Jackson’s football career was over, but the game was not. The Raiders won.

Later that year, Detroit Lions offensive lineman Mike Utley broke his neck when a Rams player fell on him. Although Utley gave a thumbs-up as he left the field, he would be paralyzed for the rest of his life. The game went on. The Lions won, 21-10.

We kept watching. Our teams were the Georgia Bulldogs and the Atlanta Falcons. I clenched my jaw. I ground my teeth. I screamed. There was this deep, guttural sound, too, this command that would emerge most often in those moments when the other team’s quarterback had the ball, and he was eluding our defenders, and he seemed on the verge of throwing or running for a touchdown.

“COME ON!” I would growl. “GET ‘IM!”

It was third and goal, the game was tied, and Washington’s Robert Griffin III was running toward the end zone. But the Falcons got him. Linebacker Sean Weatherspoon lowered his shoulder and smashed Griffin’s head. “Legal hit, good hit, great play by Sean Weatherspoon,” a TV analyst said. Griffin left the game. Suffering from a concussion, he was too disoriented to know the score. The game went on. The Falcons won.

By then it was 2012, and I knew what football could do to a player’s brain. Former Bears quarterback Jim McMahon was only 53 and already showing signs of dementia. His old teammate Dave Duerson, suffering from blurred vision and memory loss, fatally shot himself in the chest at age 50. Postmortem tests showed he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a rare brain disorder that appears to be caused by blows to the head.

The NFL reached a $765 million concussion settlement with more than 4,500 former players and developed a new protocol to detect and treat concussions. The game went on.

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Medical staff tend to Miam Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa after he took a hit during a September 29 game against the Cincinnati Bengals.

Year after year, I told myself I was going to quit. And then September rolled around, and I couldn’t stay away. “COME ON!” I growled at the Georgia defenders chasing Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa during the national championship game in 2018. “GET ‘IM!”

They got him on first down, forcing a 16-yard loss, but he got up. On 2nd-and-26 he threw deep for the winning touchdown. My son cried.

In September, playing for the Miami Dolphins, Tagovailoa was slammed to the ground by Bengals lineman Josh Tupou. I heard about it afterwards. It was a horrible sight. Tagovailoa lay on his back, his fingers stiff and crossed at odd angles, an apparent sign of a brain injury. The game went on. The Bengals won.

This time I was not watching, because I’d finally begun my trial separation from football. I’d been inching toward this decision for a long time. When the Bulldogs’ Lewis Cine hit Florida’s Kyle Pitts so hard in a November 2020 game that I thought one or both of them might be dead, I turned off the TV to protect our children.

Even after that, I kept watching until early 2022, when I finally saw the Bulldogs win a championship. It seemed like a good time to walk away.

On Saturday afternoon at the zoo, as the Georgia-Tennessee game went on, I saw a green anaconda lying motionless in shallow water. I learned that red spitting cobras can deliver a stream of venom into the eyes of an enemy several feet away. My son did not seem to miss football. He was enthralled with the reptiles. I was there but not really there. Back outside, we heard the lion roar again.

Text messages accumulated on the phone in my pocket, a running commentary on the game, keen and amusing observations from people I knew and loved regarding events of which I was unaware. Yes, I felt regret. No, I did not check the score on my phone.

We left the zoo and drove to Shake Shack. I walked in and looked straight ahead, avoiding the game on the suspended televisions, though I caught a flash of Tennessee orange in my peripheral vision.

By now it was clear. No matter how much I missed football, football did not miss me. One week in October, all five of the top-rated broadcasts on TV were either NFL games or pregame or postgame shows. The game would go on. Old players and fans would leave, and new ones would replace them.

Somewhere out there were Tim Krumrie and Bo Jackson, Mike Utley and Robert Griffin, men who walked off the field and men who were rolled off on stretchers. They were sacrificed for me, and perhaps for you, in this country’s most popular form of live entertainment.

We drove home, and I went to my office to start writing. Through the window I could see it was getting dark. More yellow leaves fell from the pecan trees. The room was so quiet. It was almost 6:30, and I did not know the score, or who was winning, or who, if anyone, was broken.
 
As an aside, ever since sports betting was legalized, I doubt the validity of any games for any sport anymore. Too much money and business men with a vested interest in gambling means its about as impartial and fair as the last couple elections.
 
I don't watch any kind of sportsball, including football, because it's boring and who gives a shit.

It's SuperBowl Sunday and I'm watching reruns of "The Mentalist" because it's more interesting.

anyone who feels the need to write an ENTIRE FUCKING ARTICLE excusing themselves from watching sportsball is a closeted faggot. SHUT THE FUCK UP, NOBODY CARES
 
Of all the celebrities the NFL could have capitalized on, her fanbase is "don't stick your dick in crazy" by the literal millions.

Like, how fucking crazy do you have to be to buy a jersey to "support" the boyfriend of a billionaire who made her bones on telling on her exes, because you've convinced yourself she's your bestie? And personally, I think it's weird and creepy that she's playing out her head cheerleader fantasy and making us all watch (anyone who says she doesn't want the attention apparently is too peabrained to notice she's dating someone who's dying for more fame; you don't date someone like that if you're trying to be low-key).

It's worse if you look at the Swift/Kelce relationship as a form of sex trafficking: Swift's literally being whored out to Kelce as payment for him being a spokesmodel for Big Pharma/NFL and Taylor, once again, allowing herself to be whored out in hopes that George Soros will allow her to regain ownership of her old master records.

I wouldn't be shocked if Kelce was explicitly chosen by Swift for such perversions explicitly because he was white as far as Soros and the NFL/Big Pharma initially wanting Taylor to get blacked and she drew a line and requested a white guy if she's going to be forced to prostituted out in the latest round of hoop jumping Soros is forcing Swift to go through before once again pulling the football away ala Lucy.
 
I don't watch any kind of sportsball, including football, because it's boring and who gives a shit.

It's SuperBowl Sunday and I'm watching reruns of "The Mentalist" because it's more interesting.

anyone who feels the need to write an ENTIRE FUCKING ARTICLE excusing themselves from watching sportsball is a closeted faggot. SHUT THE FUCK UP, NOBODY CARES
"Hah! The author of this article is such a faggot! Going out of his way to let people know he doesn't watch SPORTSBALL! Hah!

Anyway guise, I also don't watch SPORTSBALL and prefer activities like watching the MENTALIST! On Super Bowl Sunday! Such a faggot, going out of his way to let people know he doesn't watch SPORTSBALL! I'm superior because I only wrote a paragraph about it instead! Hah!"
 
Americans' idea of sports involve a lot of impact, bangs and kaboom.
Hell, most American motorsport is centered around watching cars crash.
Better believe it. While attending language school would go to the various races at Laguna Seca. Course is very large, cannot see all of it from any one spot. I camped out at 'the corkscrew' to see the crashes and spin-offs from the road.
 
"Hah! The author of this article is such a faggot! Going out of his way to let people know he doesn't watch SPORTSBALL! Hah!

Anyway guise, I also don't watch SPORTSBALL and prefer activities like watching the MENTALIST! On Super Bowl Sunday! Such a faggot, going out of his way to let people know he doesn't watch SPORTSBALL! I'm superior because I only wrote a paragraph about it instead! Hah!"
you're obviously one of those mincers who fantasizes about getting gang-banged by the the entire NFL defensive roster
 
you're obviously one of those mincers who fantasizes about getting gang-banged by the the entire NFL defensive roster
No defense for being a hypocritical retard aside from jumping to a bizarre projection homosexual fantasy after your previous comment accusing the author of the article of being a closeted homosexual for doing the exact same thing you were attacking him for? You're a pretty interesting guy, Freud would have a field day with you.

Enjoy your Mentalist.
 
It's worse if you look at the Swift/Kelce relationship as a form of sex trafficking: Swift's literally being whored out to Kelce as payment for him being a spokesmodel for Big Pharma/NFL and Taylor, once again, allowing herself to be whored out in hopes that George Soros will allow her to regain ownership of her old master records.

I wouldn't be shocked if Kelce was explicitly chosen by Swift for such perversions explicitly because he was white as far as Soros and the NFL/Big Pharma initially wanting Taylor to get blacked and she drew a line and requested a white guy if she's going to be forced to prostituted out in the latest round of hoop jumping Soros is forcing Swift to go through before once again pulling the football away ala Lucy.
I'm not deep into the conspiracy theories. I just hate Taylor Swift (she's given me asshole vibes for years, and I firmly believe history would bear me out), and I wouldn't hate Travis Kelce, but everything I've learned about him since September indicates he's as bad as she is, he just doesn't have the media reach she does.

Personally, I think the relationship happened because two PR groups figured out how media-friendly they look as a couple and how much it benefits both of them (Kelce is a media whore with an eye for stardom, Swift is also a media whore that needs a high-profile picture-perfect relationship for her fans to invest themselves in).
 
tbh american football is pretty cringe as far as sports go, it looks very mindless and brutish. i don't really get the appeal.
if you want to see violence then boxing or MMA is much better because the fighters there actually show impressive displays of skill. and if you want to see team sports then something like basketball or soccer seems much more appealing to me.
It's not. Soccer is actually far more mindless. Every single play in football is calculated and only works if mostly everyone does their job. You're far more dependent on your teammates in Football than arguably any other sport. One star player is not going to carry the game like it does in soccer.
 
Stopped watching all pro sports years ago when they went 'woke'.
Did that too but damn this year football has become "Pussy ball" as I looked in some of their highlights.
Why is Fuck I'm going to watch a watered down game to the point of them playing College style level of football..

When I can watch College Football without the Woke Faggot mindset that is in the NFL..
 
if you are watching a sport you dont actively play or participate in (at any level), youre a fucking idiot

if you play basketball, it makes sense to watch the NBA. if you play football, makes sense to watch the super bowl....but if you dont play the sport, why the fuck would you watch it
 
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I think I overdid it when I said football was bad. The sport itself is okay, but it's just that a lot of the players are just trashy. They always flaunt their wealth and do extremely low class shit like Antoine Brown. I'm not saying other sports are exempt from this, but a lot of college and professional players do just the this to the most extreme degree like Jameis Winston or Michael Vick. That's my main problem with football.
It's not. Soccer is actually far more mindless. Every single play in football is calculated and only works if mostly everyone does their job. You're far more dependent on your teammates in Football than arguably any other sport. One star player is not going to carry the game like it does in soccer.
Soccer is more about a consistent flow and smooth yet consistent transfer from offense to defense since there are no plays. Everything has to be calculated in an instant.

Football's stop and start nature involves a lot of tactics, especially when considering plays that ultimately are kinda like chess pieces. But to say soccer isn't strategic too in a more continuous sense isn't true. They both are physically exerting sports that have their place in the pantheon of real sports for a good reason.

Typos due to phoneposting
 
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