Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Sam Bradford Goes Down (Again)

Sam Bradford tore his ACL for the Second Time in a Year
For years March 9th, 2012 was seen as a great day for the St. Louis Rams. On that day not even 3 years ago, the St. Louis Rams traded the 2nd pick in the 2012 NFL draft to the Washington Redskins for the seemingly crazy return of the 6th pick in the 2012 NFL draft, a second rounder in 2012, a first rounder in both 2013 and 2014. The Rams who were just two years removed from drafting Sam Bradford and turned the "Robert Griffin III" pick into a massive haul. The Rams turned those 4 draft picks with other trades into Greg Robinson, Alec Ogletree, Stedman Bailey, Zac Stacy, Michael Brockers, Janoris Jenkins, Isaiah Pead and Rokevious Watkins. That is five starters, two quality backups. 7 of the 8 players will be on the 2014 roster. The Rams turned 1 pick in the 2012 draft into nearly 15% of their total roster. Even despite RGIII's ACL tear in his rookie year, the Redskins were also seen as winner of trade because in the eyes of many there is no price too high to pay for a franchise quarterback.

This whole trade only made sense on one condition: Sam Bradford was the Rams' franchise quarterback. The Rams drafted #1 overall in 2010 out of Oklahoma. Although Bradford was injured and only played 3 games his last year in college, Bradford played all 16 games as a rookie, winning the AP's Offensive Rookie of the Year award. In 2011, Bradford got hurt and missed nearly half of the season helping the Rams finish just 2-14 and earn the 2nd pick in the 2012 draft. Despite the growing tag of injury prone, the Rams still had confidence that Bradford would continue to grow on his rookie campaign in 2012 and beyond when they decided to go the "sure-thing" in Griffin and make that trade.

The Rams seemed right as their record improved to 7-8-1 in 2012, their best since 2006, with Bradford throwing for career highs in yards, touchdowns, and QB rating. Since 2012, little has gone right for Bradford and the Rams' hope of him as their franchise QB. Bradford played just 7 games in 2013 before tearing his ACL and now is out again for all of 2014 with a torn ACL in the same knee. Bradford will have played just 33 of 64 games over the last 4 years when the season is done. After this season, Bradford will have just one year left on his deal and the Rams for the first time since drafting him can easily cut Bradford without a big cap hit.

Can the Rams really give up on Bradford now? Can the Rams and their fans now officially start to regret that trade? The Rams were rumored to be on the Johnny Manziel hunt before the 2014 draft, but passed on him to draft Aaron Donald and remove any questions about their confidence in Bradford. Now that Bradford is hurt all of those questions come back, not just this year in passing on Manziel, but starting 3 years ago when they traded away the RGIII pick. As RGIII proved his rookie year, he does need very much to lead a team to the post season. Robert Griffin III has led his team to the playoffs more times in his first season than Sam Bradford will led the Rams in 5. Its unfortunate that we may never get to see Sam Bradford at his full potential ever or even the 4-team race that the NFC West was shaping up to be, but now we get maybe the most interesting thing you can for in sports: a great game of "What if".

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Tuesday, October 8, 2013

The Cost of Injuries in Football


If you were ever to sit in on a Sunday afternoon viewing of the Jets game with my friends, you would be sure to hear someone remark something to the liking of, "Man. I would love to be a football player and make millions of dollars." While most of us dreamed of attaining the fame and glory that comes with being a professional athlete when we were younger, I feel confident enough to say that no one took into account the potential physical sacrifices that go along with the job. Running the length of the field untouched by multiple two hundred and sixty pound linebackers is much harder said than done.

Despite the fact that the NFL has taken serious steps towards protecting players such as fining both helmet-to-helmet hits and hitting defenseless receivers, players continue to get injured at high rates. According to a recent study, there were over three thousand injuries in the NFL during the 2012-2013 season, with approximately fifteen-hundred of those injuries being serious ones. While us fans gaze in disbelief as Peyton Manning bounced back from a serious neck injury to continue to be one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL, we fail to take notice of the less media-surrounded career ending injuries.

One example of a player's potential being hindered by multiple injuries is the case of San Francisco 49er running back Marcus Lattimore. A highly sought out prospect in high school with comparisons to All-Pro running back Adrian Peterson, Lattimore committed to the University of South Carolina. He went on to receive First-Team All-SEC and Second-Team All-American honors during his freshman campaign, but after tearing multiple ligaments in his knees during his sophomore and junior seasons, Lattimore fell from a presumably top 15 pick to a 4th round nobody in the NFL draft.

In financial terms, this means that Lattimore went from receiving a four year, approximately 10 million dollar contract with a 5 million dollar guaranteed signing bonus to making no more than seven digits a year. Lattimore is spending his first season on the Injured Reserve list, and will most likely not live up to his potential due to long-term knee problems. This is just one of the many examples of injuries resulting in financial consequences for football players.

Unfortunately, while career-threatening injuries occur almost every football weekend, NFL contracts are non-guaranteed. In 2003, multi-dimensional quarterback Daunte Culpepper signed a 10 year, 102 million dollar contract with the Minnesota Vikings, with only 16 million guaranteed. After a couple of up and down seasons and knee injuries, Culpepper received a mere 19 million dollars; less than 20% of his initial contract. Unlike in baseball and basketball where players' contracts are primarily guaranteed, in the NFL, players end up only receiving fractions of their "mega-million" deals.

Teddy Bridgewater after winning the Sugar Bowl
In response to these career-threatening and bank-deflating injuries, promising college football players have taken precautions. The popularity of talented college football players buying disability insurance has burgeoned since the early 1990's. College football players who aspire to be in the NFL purchase disability insurance so that they will still make money even if they have career-ending injuries in college.

Although these injuries aren't statistically likely, future 1st round NFL draft picks Teddy Bridgewater and Jadeveon Clowney have bought insurance policies that are worth ten and five million respectively. Unlike college players, NFL players do not usually take out similar insurance plans because the likelihood for NFL athletes to have career-ending injuries is much more likely than a college football player having a similar injury before making it to the NFL. Therefore, private insurance companies aren't willing to cover the risky lifestyle of being a professional football player.

The most prevalent and arguably most serious injury in the NFL today is concussions. Although there is currently more concussion awareness in the NFL today than there was ten years ago, there were still 265-270 reported concussion cases per season over the past three years. The NFL recently settled a suit with 4500 former players granting retirees 765 million dollars, but I believe I can speak for most of us by saying that the long-term health consequences of concussions cannot be compensated financially. Although athletes may only sit out one game for concussion-related symptoms, the intangible consequences of this injury cannot be met by any amount of money.

So does the financial benefit of being a professional football player outweigh the risks related to career and potential life threatening injuries?

That's for you to decide. 

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