There are other interpretations to my speculative thesis here; for instance, the players could have been reported as injured, when they really weren't. Outside of any credible report as to how Clark and especially Collie injured themselves so severely, apparently days after their last game, I'd say this is reasonble speculation. If one assumes the outcomes of the games are predetermined, at least to some degree, then the players would probably have an understanding of these things, at least by the time they sign their first lucrative contract.
I've answered the "Why don't they fix it for Vick" kind of questsions before. I'm not a part of those fixing the games, if they are fixed, so I don't know for certain who is going to be the ultimate winner in any given year. If I did, I'd be profiting immensely from that knowledge. But my question wasn't answered, either; how you explain Pittsburgh's success this season? Unqualified black coach, nearly all black roster, going 3-1 without Big Ben- how does that work, since under any non- fixed scenario, a team coached by Tomlin and full of sumos and AA players, should be one of the weakest in the league?
I am for everyone getting an equal opportunity, in whatever field of endeavor. In the NFL and the NBA, it is crystal clear that white players are systematically discriminated against, and have been for many, many years. Even if the games are fixed, I can watch them for whatever entertainment value they possess, much as I'd watch a sitcom or pro wrestling. And having more white players involved is more likely to attract my interest.
To clarify my "fixed" theories, obviously the games are actually played. There is real hitting involved, and real injuries happen. My point has been, and continues to be, that the officials, at the very least, manipulate the outcomes of games through the penalties they call, or don't call, at appropriate times. This is done, I believe, at the behest of league officials, who profit enormously from it.
I frankly don't care if any of you accept this. I'm used to being scoffed at, and have grown quite accustomed to it. I continue to maintain that the notion NFL games are fixed is less "extreme" and "crazy," in the eyes of most Americans, than that the league actively discriminates against white players. Also, keep in mind that the two groups who are essential to the survival of the Caste System-the DWFs and the jock-sniffing journalists-are apt to the be the most passionate defenders of the pristine nature of the NFL and would probably violently object to the idea of "fixed" games.
Put my posts in whatever forum you want.