Super Bowl

Don Wassall

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The Depression has significantly impacted the Big Game:


Super Bowl takes a hit: Recession zaps big game


TAMPA, Fla. (AP)â€â€There were mountains of jumbo shrimp, and caviar everywhere. Muhammad Ali would show up, maybe amid a fleet of shiny Cadillacs. Five-star hotels were packed, and getting a dinner reservation for Saturday night was impossible. Finding a ticket for Sunday was even harder.


In years past, the Super Bowl was so much more than a game. It was an outright orgy of football, glitz and gluttony, a celebration of excess where too much was never enough.


The No. 1 sporting event in America is still a big deal. Nearly 100 million of us will tune in Sunday night when the Pittsburgh Steelers play the Arizona Cardinals.


But in these tough economic times, it's easy to see: The Super Bowl is taking a hit, too.


General Motors and FedEx pulled their TV ads, even though NBC lowered the price. Playboy canceled its annual party. Almost 200 fewer media credentials were issued.


"When I think of the NFL, I think of recession-proof," Cardinals lineman Elliot Vallejo said this week. "But that's not true anymore."


Used to be everywhere you looked around a Super Bowl town, all you could see was advertising. There were commercial booths at every turn. The headquarters hotel and media center looked like giant trade shows.


Now you can look pretty much everywhere and actually see things. Such as empty tables at local restaurants and vacant hotel rooms downtown.


StubHub does have a sign on the mezzanine level at Raymond James Stadium. The nationwide ticket broker also had more than 3,000 seats for sale, as of midweek. They were getting less expensive by the minute.


"In terms of pricing, this game has become the Limbo Bowlâ€â€how low can it go?" StubHub spokesman Sean Pate said. "When it comes to plunking down $7,000 for a weekend, people are becoming more pragmatic. They have other needs."


Dave Gornick hears that from his pals. Now a dentist in Gibsonia, Pa., the lifelong Steelers fan grew up in steel-mill country.


"Some of the guys I tailgate with, they're blue-collar guys making $30,000 or $35,000 a year, and they didn't have the $1,600 you had to put up in advance to get into the lottery for Super Bowl tickets," he said. "In the past, I think they would've done anything to get to the Super Bowl. Not now, not with this economy."


On the other hand, it might be cheaper to go to the game.


While tickets are still priceyâ€â€about 15,000 at a record $1,000 apiece, and 53,000 at $800 eachâ€â€another 1,000 cost $500â€â€down from last year's low of $700, the first cut in Super Bowl history.


And tickets that cost $2,500 or more from scalpers and brokers could be selling at face value by kickoff.


"I haven't seen empty stadiums yet. I haven't seen games being blacked out on TV because they haven't sold out," Cardinals defensive end Travis LaBoy said. "But they're saying this is the lowest price for a Super Bowl ticket. That's the economy, tenfold."


In a week or so, the NFL plans to make a more painful cut, reducing 10 percent of its staff.


"These are difficult and painful steps," commissioner Roger Goodell recently wrote in a memo to employees. "But they are necessary in the current economic environment. I would like to be able to report that we are immune to the troubles around us, but we are not."


Still the gold standard in sports worldwide, the league with annual revenues of $6.5 billion is paying the price. But with television money already locked in and most tickets committed in advance, the NFL is far from struggling.


The league won't feel the biggest effects from the recession until it's time for fans to renew and buy season tickets.


"There's no secret on sponsorship, advertising, licensingâ€â€those numbers are going to be impacted by the current climate. We're aware of that," Goodell told The Associated Press before Thanksgiving.


"We're still, unfortunately, in the beginning stages of this. And most of our tickets are sold in the spring. And so '09 is going to be more of a barometer of how impactful the economic environment's going to be on the NFL," he said.


Steelers tackle Jeremy Parquet is busy these days checking his long-term investments, financial portfolios and retirement accounts.


"We're lucky because as athletes, we make good salaries. But everyone is affected," he said. "With Barack Obama as our president, maybe it'll change in the next two years."


Too late for Warrick Dunn.


One of the most popular players in Tampa Bay history, Dunn and Buccaneers teammate Derrick Brooks planned to hold a charity event while the Super Bowl was in town. Widely recognized for their community service, they were all set to host the Brooks & Dunn Inaugural Golf Classic this week.


Many locals figured that if anyone in the area could put on a successful outing, it was these two. But earlier this month, the event was canceled. Not enough corporate sponsorship and support.


"We raised a good amount of money, but we were hoping for more," Dunn said. "I guess it's not surprising, given these tough times. People don't have as much money to spend."


[url]http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ap-superbowl-economy&a mp;prov=ap&type=lgns[/url]
 

Colonel_Reb

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Yeah, they said the same thing about FDR and look where he got us.
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No one president will ever make much of a difference. Yeah dummies, keep on thinking that Obama is THE magic negro!
 

j41181

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I'll keep repeating this: Obama ain't perfect!!!!! No president is!!!!!
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James

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And now the Republicans have their own "magic Negro", Michael Steele is the new chairman of the Republican National Committee.

Super Bowl advertising is just about sold out at $3 million for a 30 second spot.
 

DixieDestroyer

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...Another RINO guiding the GOP down the Neocon's path of Globalist servitude.
 

Andrew Lynch

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Too true. Too true. Professional sports aren't the only thing "diversity" is killing. Wait until the day when 85 percent of politicians are black.
 

PhillyBirds

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Figure we should have a discussion thread, if anyone's interested.

Big Ben runs it in for the first TD of the game. He looks sharp to begin it. Monty Beisel is also seeing some time as a situational LB for Arizona.

I also just noticed that Pittsburgh has two white TEs listed as starters. So that gives them...6?
 

Don Wassall

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whiteathlete33 said:
I'm just watching bits and pieces of this Superbowl. There isn't much to get excited about.


I agree. Found myself watching the replay of the final set of the Aussie Open more than the football game.
 

PhillyBirds

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whiteathlete33 said:
I'm just watching bits and pieces of this Superbowl. There isn't much to get excited about.

Just have it on as background noise while I'm finishing up some homework. I had a feeling interest in the game would be lukewarm, to say the least.
 

celticdb15

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FIxed
 

Liverlips

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Yeah, I noticed the Steelers started 6 whites today and both teams played many white subs. Small consolation, of course.

May at least one team have the balls to allow at least 11 white starters next year. New England and the Packers are close to that already.
 

celticdb15

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Rooney would like to thank Obama
 

Van_Slyke_CF

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A bunch of penalties by undisciplined black players almost cost the Steelers in the end.

Big Ben should have been the MVP.

Congratulations Steelers on Super Bowl victory #6!
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Bart

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Van_Slyke_CF said:
A bunch of penalties by undisciplined black players almost cost the Steelers in the end.


Even in the Super Bowl we witness unbelievable displays of TNB. It really is amazing. Too bad the Cardinals let them off the hook.
Van_Slyke_CF said:
Big Ben should have been the MVP.


I didn't watch the post game. Ben wasn't named the MVP?
 

DixieDestroyer

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Steelers TE Heath Miler had 5 catches for 57 yards & (unfortunately) dropped a likely TD pass. He had some nice blocking too. Too bad he didn't snag that TD.
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Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

Deadlift

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I do think the Cardinals' are a more "ghetto thug" team compared to the Steelers.

Congrats to Bruce Arians and Dick LaBeau, the "secret weapons" of the Steelers.
 

Don Wassall

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Roethlisberger was the clear and obvious MVP of the game. Santonio Holmes played a great game, but his getting the MVP over Big Ben is reminiscent of Deon Branch getting it over the more worthy Tom Brady several years ago.


On an unrelated note, during the NFL Network's
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highlights of the game, while Jerheme Urban's big fourth quarter catch is shown Rich Eisen
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refers toUrban as "tight end Matt Spaeth" (who plays for the Steelers).
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But at least Eisen can speak basic English, unlike his very un-diverse array of studio sidekicks -- Deion Sanders
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, Marshall Faulk
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, and Warren Sapp
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.
 

White Shogun

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Van_Slyke_CF said:
A bunch of penalties by undisciplined black players almost cost the Steelers in the end.

Big Ben should have been the MVP.

Congratulations Steelers on Super Bowl victory #6!
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Defensive penalties did cost the Cardinals though. Three personal fouls on one drive?? W T F???

Just shows you how good Warner really is that he can take this group of undisciplined thugs to the Super Bowl. The Cards were the 5th most penalized team in the league this year. Edited by: White Shogun
 

bigunreal

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Until the last part of the 4th quarter, this was, to quote Comic Book Guy, the "worst super bowl ever." The officials were way too involved, as usual, with penalties called at crucial times, definitely affecting the outcome of the game. The ending was exciting, but it was a foregone conclusion that the Steelers would win. As perhaps the most "chosen" franchise of the past 35 years, I hardly felt the scripters were going to have them lose to perhaps the least "chosen" franchise in NFL history.

This was one of the worst outcomes imaginable for those of us who want to dismantle the Caste system. Young, dynamic black coach wins. He will now almost certainly be the "sexiest" coach in the league, in the eyes of all drunk white fans. I heard the announcers say, far before the game was over, that Tomlin has "set the new standard" and that teams will now be looking for "dyanmic" young coaches like him. Odious owner Rooney, creator of the rule that ensures more and more black coaches, supporter of Obama, hater of white players, wins. Nothing good will come out of this victory.

So many ridiculous plays- with the most absurd being Harrison's 100 yard stumbling, bumbling slow motion return of an interception. I've never seen such a festival of missed tackling and lack of effort on the part of the Cardinals offense. It was an absolute disgrace that they allowed a plodding defender to run 100 yards for a touchdown at the end of the half.

Btw, did anyone notice that for at least part of the game, Jereme Urban wasn't the Cardinals' 4th WR? Instead, the brilliant rocket scientists on their staff inserted hands of stone black DB Antrelle (I think that's his typically preposterous first name) Rolle as a 4th WR. Wow- can you insult a WR more than that?

I thought that the Steelers-Seahawks were the two worst teams to make it to the Super Bowl in its history, a few years ago. I'd have to say that the Cardinals are at least as mediocre as the Seahawks were, while the Steelers as just as ordinary as they were then.

Overall, it was a typically underwhelming Super Bowl, boring for the most part, and played at just as shoddy a level as all NFL games are now. I think it was fixed, just as I think all NFL games are fixed. It's a shame that Kurt Warner didn't "win" this game, since all the jock-sniffers were speculating over the past few weeks that if he "won" a second Super Bowl, then maybe, just maybe, he might make the Hall of Fame. The fact that there is any question about him being a Hall of Famer ought to tell you all you need to know about the Caste system. Edited by: bigunreal
 

GeneralLee

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I tell this game was fixed Kurt Warner got this game takin from him yes the Cardinals skrewed up with some penalty's but that wasn't a cat for the final TD it looked to me his feet or one foot was out of bounds plus the fial play that wasn't a fumble his arm was in forward motion oh well that life.
I still Hate the Steelers and I'm a Kurt Warner fan.
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