Week 1 2009

Don Wassall

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McKelvin made a very stupid play by running the ball out of the endzone, but it was a legitimate strip; he didn't just drop the ball.

And it took excellent execution on Brady's two TD throws, including Brady having to throw the ball accurately and Ben Watson having to actually make the catch both times.

Despite some obligatory poor tackling and bad hands, it was a hard-fought game. These guys aren't automatons like the vibrating football players on the old child's game. Were the Patriots two TD passes choreographed before the game with both teams?Does each player now secretly receive instructions in his helmet the way the QB anddefensive captaindo, so that players on both teams knew exactly how to let New England score? Did the league have to have this game end like that? Is it because the incredibly successful NFL is suddenly in trouble? How about the San Diego-Oakland game? Why then are there so many one-sided games, and so many boring games, and so many poorly played games.

I've posted before, as have others,about the small amount of anectodal evidence that a few games in the past have been suspicious. "Tweaking" a result for gambling reasons is certainly very possible, maybe even probable on occasion.But claiming that the Bills-Patriots ending wasscripted for dramatic effect isassuming vast pre-knowledge among everyone associated with the league (meaning no one employed by the league has any honor or integrity) and therefore a helluva lot of other people, not to mentionhaving to executekey scripted plays perfectly, something many NFL players have a problem with most of the time.

The evidence for the Caste System is overwhelming and omnipresent. The evidence that every NFL game is fixed, or that many games are,is still, after all these years,non-existent. Edited by: Don Wassall
 

Kaptain

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Anyways, why wasn't that fumble reviewed? Not even a discussion about it - I don't think. I notice the idiot's left knee appeared to be down before the ball pops loose. Take a look a this youtube at about 24 sec. mark:

knee down

update: I was wrong - fumble all the way. Anyways, is there a way I could delete my entire post? I don't see a delete button like I think we used to have.Edited by: Kaptain Poop
 

StarWars

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I don't believe that the affletes in the NFL are really capable of such a hoax. Maybe a key play or game here and there for money.
 

White Shogun

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I don't think they have to fix all the games or even most of them, nor require a huge number of players to effect the outcome or script a few story lines. A couple of key players here or there, and a ref or two, could be enough to change the final score. However, I don't see it as done for caste purposes, but for gambling. And of course the outcome isn't guaranteed, either, because of all the other players who aren't in on the fix.

I think it is naive to assume that no NFL game, ever, has ever been 'fixed' or tampered with - meaning that a player didn't take cash to drop a ball, fumble, or overthrow a pass, or for a ref to throw a flag (or not) at the most opportune time. Likewise, I find it more likely that the U.S. government knew about the 9/11 attacks than to think the entire NFL is rigged from top to bottom, WWE style.

Just my opinion.
 

referendum

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Concerning a fix for gambling purposes, the Bills still covered the spread I'm sure with only a one point loss.
 

ToughJ.Riggins

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Westside said:
For the record I meant "can" to be "can't" for my last post. Ok TJR you get sole credit for Afrolete. Very funny. Also, I want to thank you for your in depth and concise posts on how the caste system works. You are with out a doubt a truely valued member and scholar here at CF. Thank you. I hope you were not offended by my post months ago about being a "casteoholic".

No, the casteoholic thing was funny. But the scary thing is, it is actually true about me. I do have to watch myself, I even dream about white RBs and WRs getting screwed over sometimes (a caste nightmare lol). The situation might be worse then what happened with baseball pre-Jackie Robinson. At least the blacks had their Negro leagues way back then (and nobody made much money back then anyway even the white players). The blacks got to play any position they wanted professionally in their own leagues unlike whites today at CB, RB and WR.

Plus you would think with a vast amount of information out there today and our modernized culture that people wouldn't stand for blatant hate on white athletes in this day and age. Quotas and Affirmative action are wrong, but this goes way beyond that. This is the "100%" blacklisting of an entire race of people (multiple races actually) for working in certain roles (positions) for a living. It is obvious what is going on, yet the DWFs really are like blind squirrels. And even a blind squirrel should be able to find a nut once in a while.
 

bigunreal

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I don't want to turn this into another "fixed" thread. However, just a few quick points.

There are several reasons to believe these games are fixed that I haven't touched on here before. First, how many times during every game do we see a 3rd and inches or 4th and inches situation? No way can they be that exact, and at the very least I think it's obvious the referees are trained to spot the ball that way for dramatic purposes. Second, how is it possible for one team's defense to completely shut down their opponent for almost an entire half, yet then allow that same anemic offense to drive down the field for a score at the end of the half, or the game, because they are in a "prevent" defense? Even the jock- sniffing journalists laugh at the "prevent" defense, and joke that it "prevents you from winning," yet all teams still employ it. Why?

Conversely, if the "hurry up offense" is so effective, why don't teams always use it? Why would you not want to be in an offense that works? It seems clear that every team's base offense is not as effective, on average, as their no huddle offense. Even the jock sniffers acknowledge that it keeps the defense from making substitutions, doesn't allow them time to adjust, etc. Also, it certainly tires out the fat sumos on the defense even quicker than a regular paced offense does. Much as coaches purposefully employ less skilled players because of racial reasons, they intentionally run offenses and defenses that don't work as well against the opposition. None of that makes sense if their goal is victory.

Finally, as a long time youth coach, I find the demeanor of NFL coaches, during the regular, brief halftime interviews to be totally unbelievable. In many cases, these allegely super competitive men are literally accosted by the bimbo sideline reporter only seconds after the half has ended, often when their team has played poorly, and sometimes only an instant after a terrible play has cost them last second points. Invariably, they are calm and civil, unflappable in the face of this supposedly fierce competitive event. I know that if someone had tried to interview me at the half of some of the youth games I coached, I would not be able to be that calm and composed. The competitive spirit just doesn't permit that, even at the lowest levels of coaching. I can't accept that highly driven professionals do not display some visible irritation, at the very least, during these interviews. Combined with the lovefest between the players that occurs immediately after every allegedly hard fought battle, it just seems way too unrealistic, and more like the way actors comport themselves when they've finished filming.

I don't know exactly how they fix the games, but I don't think the players have to even be involved. The officials, with their convenient use of holding, pass interference, illegal block in the back and false start penalties, can pretty much determine which team wins.
 
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To make the claim that the Patriots-Bills game on Monday night was fixed would be to say that Tom Brady is a fraud.
 

dwid

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I would think the no huddle/hurry up offense is not utilized more is because most of the affletes are out of shape and would not be able to play the majority of the game in that situation. I do think refs sometimes alter things, I dont know if it is to try to sway the game in a certain direction (I dont think you can ultimately fix a football game, there are too many people involved and too many variables, but refs calls can influence a game a certain way) Maybe their calls are to benefit the dwf's precious affletes, like the linemen who are supposed to be more athletic yet hold all the time, stand too far off the line of scrimmage, ghost pass interference calls etc against dbs, no offensive pass interference calls. Holding calls that dont seem to be holding yet negate a big play. Last year Adrian Peterson fumbled the ball, the ball was coming out of his hands before his knee touched the ground. Ed Hochuli's explanation was "although the ball was coming out of his hand before his knee touched the ground, his hand was still technically touching the ball when his knee hit the ground" How does that make sense? I think that was ultimately to benefit one of the poster boys of the NFL, because Brian Young , a good DT had been stuffing Adrian Peterson all night, was one of the reason's he was held for under 30 yards.Edited by: dwid
 

Freethinker

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bigunreal,

I have sided with you about the "fix" thing in the past. The last time that comes to mind being the non-review of the Warner fumble at the end of the Super Bowl allowing Obama's and diversity loving, white hating Rooney's team to win. However, this time I do not believe the Bills/Pats game was fixed. Chalk this one up to boneheaded negro behavior. The notion that all the affletes could be "acting out a pre-rehearse script" is as believable as thinking well trained farm animals could perform a Broadway musical.

Does that mean the NFL games are 100% legit? That is debatable. If we all agree that the players who are allowed to play is predestined then how can we dismiss that other aspects aren't tampered with as well.

I do not believe the main goal of the NFL, NBA or MLB is to destroy the white race through social and mental manipulation. This is part of it but the main objective is to make money. Since it is entertainment, they need to provide an exciting product. After the civil rights movement when the collective thought was pushed towards everything black is cool, professional sports began to reflect this. Blacks are athletic, fast, cool and exciting while whites are boring, slow, etc. Owners, GMs and coaches bought into this notion, replacing better players with more "entertaining" ones. DWFs subscribed as well, believing that they are watching the world's most exciting players. Well why stop there. Why not make the games closer or more dramatic. As you and others have mention, the referees wield much power with "phantom penalties" that can really be called almost every play. Also, big market cities produce better ratings so I believe those teams get "nudged" towards the top or towards the playoffs. For example in the NBA, big market teams like the Celtics were "handed" Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett, pushing them from the bottom to top over night. The Lakers received Pau Gasol for spare parts as well, returning them the Championship level. The Knicks overcame huge odds to win the lottery and picked franchise saving Pat Ewing back in the day as well. Most of the dynasties in sports come from big market cities. Maybe this is all just coincidence, I'm not sure.

As for the lovefests between players after games, I think that reflects the nature of blacks versus whites. It is the white race that has the competitive drive, winning team first attitude and professional work ethic. The black affletes are making money win or loss in their eyes so why be hostile to their brothas on the other team. They will be going to the club later together most likely anyway. Go to any fast food chain or retailer to see blacks competitive, professional drive.

The points on the prevent defense and hurry up offense are well made and have baffled me for years. Maybe coaches purposely don't run their teams this way the whole game because the affletes simply aren't conditioned well enough.

Sorry for the rant. If we want to see sports at its purest we need to watch amateur sporting events. Professional sports are tainted by greed, egos, and the whole gambling aspect I will not even get into. I accept all of this but will not accept white athletes getting screwed anymore. Hopefully the business failings of the NFL and NBA will reverse these anti-white policies.Edited by: Freethinker
 

backrow

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honestly, if they wanted to fix the thing they would not throw it to Watson...

anyhow, back to actual football talk:

Browns signed Ray Ventrone!
 

Thrashen

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Wouldnt "scripting" the NFL would be far easier than creating a 30 year long, racially-motivated caste system involving oweners, GM's, players, scouts, and coaches?

Wouldnt it be easier than instilling the ideals of utter self-hatred into the minds of nearly every single white american (and Euro)?

Wouldnt it be easier than creating an ultra-biased media that despises all things traditional, all things moral, and all things white?

Wouldnt it be easier than "tricking" white males into accepting rediculous race-based, faith-based, and sex-based regulations (AA, civil rights act, etc) developed solely to degrade the quality of life for only white males?

I find it interesting that we so easily admit that all these things are occurring, yet if we suggested these things to the "common man," he'd laugh it off, deny it, or merely label you a "conspiracy nut".....kind of like what happens to Bigunreal whenever he suggests this concept.

Don's correct, there isnt enough absolute proof to reach any conclusions, however, you must all admit that nearly anything is possible in this super-corrupt country....and we all freely admit that far more intricate "hoaxes" are being, and have been, perpetrated by the PTB. Edited by: Thrashen
 

Don Wassall

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bigunreal said:
I don't know exactly how they fix the games, but I don't think the players have to even be involved. The officials, with their convenient use of holding, pass interference, illegal block in the back and false start penalties, can pretty much determine which team wins.

That's the key statement. You don't know how they do it "exactly," in fact you don't know anything about how or if they do at all. One time it's all the players following WWE scripts, the next time no players at all need be involved. So all we do is end up with the same completely unsupported statement over and overthat all the games are fixed, without addressing the compelling points made by others.

There are those that just "know" Sasquatch exists, that there are aliens hidden away at Area 51, that there are Nazi bases beneath Antarctica, and that the ruling class consists of shape changing reptiles.They don't need proof,they justknow, because theybelieve, because it makes sense to them. In the case of every NFL game being fixed, the belief doesn't even need a theory on how it advances black domination or white weakness; for example the continuing failure of black QBs in generaland the failure of black QBs to win on the biggest stage of them all, the Super Bowl. If one game is fixed to provide drama, no explanation is given for the many games that are one-sided.

Again, the Caste System is not a belief, it's a reality provable by all types of evidence, mostly indirect but some direct, and by what one can see with his own eyes by following sports and the way the media covers sports.



Edited by: Don Wassall
 

StarWars

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I agree if we start saying the games are all fixed and other hunches, it makes us all look a little less credible. Unfortunately, so does saying we are a WN, because that is just an impossibility for many liberals, women, and jews to comprehend.
 

bigunreal

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The reason I say I don't know how the games would be fixed is because I don't- just being honest. Obviously, they wouldn't invite me to any meetings where the scripts are written. I think the games are fixed. I'm not sure they are, and can't prove it. I just make observations and think it provides interesting fodder for debate.

I first started thinking the games were fixed back in the mid-1970s, way before I looked at the racial dynamics in the league, and before the discrimination was so blatant. Thus, I don't think the primary motivating force behind scripting games, if such a thing is being done, is promoting black players at the expense of white ones. I believe the primary reason would probably be related to gambling, as has been suggested here.

Of course, I always expect a team with a high profile, obnoxious black player (especially Vick, when he was starting for the Falcons), to win the Super Bowl. The scripters are unpredictable; who knows, maybe they don't want those like me, who are on to them, to make money from betting on games using logical, Caste System evidence. That doesn't change my central premise; at the very least, the officials are corrupt and can change the outcome of any game.

I know I can't change many minds here, or among those I interact with on a daily basis. I simply think the NFL is corrupt to the core, as is exemplified by the inexcusable way they discriminate against highly qualified white players and promote Affirmative Action style black players. I mentioned the no-huddle, prevent defense, far too frequent short yardage situations, demeanor of coaches at halftime, etc., in order to stimulate conversation. If you think I have some valid points, great. If not, we disagree. Either way, I'm with everyone here on the importance of destroying the Caste System.
 

Kaptain

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The games aren't fix, but the unwritten policy of the NFL that allows a retarded RB to run the football out of the endzone instead of a better suited white atlete is fixed. It's called the caste system. They don't need to fix games when the system is already in place. The caste system is fixed - the games are not (in general). Why fix a game when the only important outcome (black superiority/white inferiority) is already pre-determined by the lack of white players?
 

foreverfree

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referendum said:
Concerning a fix for gambling purposes, the Bills still covered the spread I'm sure with only a one point loss.

Wonder how many parlay bettors in Delaware benefitted (or suffered) by Mon. night's developments in Foxborough?
smiley5.gif
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Also...
(16 games * 32 teams)/2 =256 reg. season games
4 wc games + 4 division playoffs + 2 conf. champs. + 1 SB = 11 postseason games
That's 267 games. Quite a lot of games to fix. I doubt if they all are.

And that doesn't even include preseason "scrimmages" as Tim Green called preseason games, or the Pro Bowl.

And you have 29 guys on the field (legally) at any one time (22 players plus seven officials), plus the replay official upstairs. That's 30 men who have the most control of the outcome of anybody in the stadium. That's a lot of guys to coordinate.

FWIW....

John

P.S. Someone can start a thread on fixing in the FBS and maybe the FCS. I've never seen one on CF, but then again, I rarely visit the CFB board.
 

white is right

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I think games have been fixed for betting reasons in the past and wouldn't be surprised if some fairly recent games have been fixed. I remember seeing the playoff series between LA and Sacramento and getting into a discussion with people at the bar as was at that the game wasn't on the level. Years later the NBA betting scandal came out and the ref in the middle was officiating during that fishy looking series.
 

bigunreal

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Foreverfree,

I've posted this before, but we do know for a fact that at least one high profile college football player conspired to throw a high profile game. Irving Fryar belatedly admitted, about ten years after the fact, that he'd been paid to drop passes in the 1984 championship game between Nebraska and Miami. If you recall, he had a few very significant drops in that game, which contributed to Miami's close victory.

The reaction to Fryar's comments was very telling. There was a brief blip in the media for a few days (more so in the Washington, D.C. area, as Fryar was playing for the Redskins at the time), but then the story went down the memory hole. More importantly, no one questioned Fryar as to WHO it was that offered to pay him off for dropping passes. You'd think a few of those "journalists" might have been at least a little curious about that. Also, no one wondered if a star like Fryar had been co-opted like that, then perhaps others in that game, or in other big games, might have been given similar offers. The whole story died without anyone in the media, or the NCAA, investigating whether their institution had been corrupted by unsundry influences. At the very least, the NCAA should have demanded to know the identities of the people who paid Fryar off. The fact that they, and their mouthpieces in the media, remained totally silent, encourages me to believe they weren't interested in repairing any lost credibility because they were aware of such things and probably were accessories themselves.

As should be obvious, I think the NFL is conspiring against white players in a definite "fix" to deny them jobs that they are well qualified for. Because of all the observations I've mentioned, seen over the course of decades of watching NFL games, I came to the conclusion a long time ago that the games themselves were not any more honest than the people who coach, staff and own the teams.

Again, just my honest opinion about the aubject.
 

white is right

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Here is an excerpt about past game fixing and alleged attempts at game fixing. Notice how Unreal's favorite player Irving Fryer is mentioned in the excerpt....Interference:
How Organized Crime Influences Professional Football

By Dan E. Moldea

Chapter One

On Fixing Games and Inside Information

I once asked Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Len Dawson of the Kansas City Chiefs whether the fact that his team's games had been taken off the betting boards by bookmakers across the country during the late 1960s was an indication that they were fixed. Dawson replied, "It would be a dangerous thing to fix a game. To me, a player would be branded for life if he did that. His teammates would express shock and anger. I don't know how one guy could do it, even a quarterback. In our system, we ran the ball a lot. Even when I wasn't in there, it didn't make much difference who was quarterback, because the defense scored points to help win games.

"I suppose the quarterback could put the ball on the ground, with turnovers in crucial situations. It would certainly have a bearing on the game. Hell, a kicker could have as much to do with it just by missing. He has more control over it than sometimes the quarterback does."

Defensive back Dick "Night Train" Lane, formerly of the Detroit Lions and also a member of the Hall of Fame, told me that while he was a player he was once approached by Donald Dawson, the Detroit gambler who was later linked in a federal probe with Len Dawson, who was no relation. Recalling the incident, which he did not report to the NFL, Lane says, "Don told me, 'Quarterbacks do a lot of betting themselves. Did you know that?' I said [laughing], 'Get out of here.' He said, 'You know it can be done, Night Train. You're the only man between the goal post and a receiver. You can slip and fall and let the guy score.'"

When I asked Lane whether Don Dawson was really suggesting that he throw a game, Lane replied that that was clearly his impression. He added that he had known Dawson for years and worked for his cousin, a Detroit car dealer, during the off-season. Lane also said that Dawson talked about the other players with whom he did business--a fact confirmed by agents for the FBI, the U.S. Strike Force Against Organized Crime, and the IRS, among other federal agencies.

Don Dawson admitted to me that he had made that statement to Lane, whom he described as "a good friend of mine." Dawson says, "I'm sure I said that to him. Not that I was trying to bribe him, but he was probably trying to feel me out, too. Over the years, there were a lot of players I bet for, but they weren't necessarily doing any business [participating in a fix]. But some of them were prepared to do it. They came to me. I was a wealthy guy. I had money. The players weren't making any money. The owners were making all the money."

Former all-pro defensive back Bernie Parrish, an author of a 1971 book critical of the NFL whose playing career spanned from 1959 to 1966, told me, "Sure, there were players who participated in shaving points in games and that sort of thing. Yeah, I played in them. But I always heard about it after the game was over."

Don Dawson confessed to me that during the 1950s and 1960s, he had been personally involved in the fixing of no fewer than thirty-two NFL games.

That was the fear during the 1980s when, according to law enforcement officials, no fewer than nine NFL teams--the Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys, Denver Broncos, Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, New Orleans Saints, San Diego Chargers, San Francisco 49ers, and the Washington Redskins--found themselves the targets of investigations in which players had been allegedly given drugs by gamblers who were looking for an on-field edge. And, particularly in 1988, numerous other NFL teams found their players being disciplined by the league for using, buying, and/or selling drugs, which along with gambling are the two most lucrative enterprises of organized crime.

Don Dawson's shocking admission is a first. No one has ever stepped forward and claimed to have actually been involved in fixed games. Although such charges have occasionally been made through the years of the NFL's existence, they have traditionally been hard to prove. "They are cases where it's difficult to discover hard evidence as to who is involved," says Brian Gettings, a former Strike Force attorney in Miami who was responsible for prosecuting Gilbert Lee Beckley, the Mafia's onetime top layoff bookmaker. "You have to have an individual directly involved in the sports bribe or the fix to get a successful prosecution. And that is quite difficult."

Marty Kane, one of Beckley's top associates, told me, "If I wanted to fix a game, there're three players I'd get: the quarterback, the offensive center, and a defensive back. Then I would bet as much money as I could. I would have beards. I would have people all over the country trying to bet for me on this game."

Oddsmaker Bobby Martin remembers, "There were a lot of fixed games during the 1950s, but there's nothing like that anymore. Years ago, players bet, mostly on their own teams. They'd say, 'Oh, I see we're six point favorites or four-point underdogs. We'll win this game. We know much better than the people who post the odds about what we can do.' And then they'd bet $100 or $200.

"But, now, the players are paid too much money. There's too much of a spotlight on them. Oddsmakers want honest football. We don't want anything dishonest. It interferes with our handicapping if the games are fixed. I can't get a true picture of the value of the teams."

Mort Olshan, perhaps the most renowned football handicapper in the United States and the publisher of the widely-read Gold Sheet, agrees and told me, "The tip off on any fix is manifested in the movement of the odds and the appearance of 'unnatural' money. To orchestrate a fix would require the cooperation of a coach and one or more of his top players; no nonessential player or underpaid sub is in a position to affect the outcome. Even then there is no guarantee the culprits could pull it off. There are too many outside factors.

"To make the risk worthwhile, the high-salaried athlete would expect a sizable payoff. But the chief deterrent to a setup is that virtually the only source one can place a substantial bet with is a bookie. And just as soon as the first plunge is made, the odds will move dramatically. Since this would be no penny-ante venture, more bets would follow. To avoid instant suspicion, 'unnatural' money would be spread all over the nation's betting marts. Since bookmakers have telephones, word would spread faster than news of a nuclear attack. If the jackpot got too big the game would be taken off the board. The skullduggery would be spotted in no time."

Olshan also added that sporting contests have been fixed. "Sure, that kind of foul was going on in college basketball during the 1950s. Games were fixed, and points were shaved. For the handicappers and the bookmakers, it was corrupt and costly. Bookmakers were burned financially and the handicappers' figures became irrelevant. If you look at the college basketball fixes during the early 1950s, it had the effect of putting a lot of bookmakers out of business. When a game is fixed, they are the first ones to suffer the consequences."

A star of the 1969 Super Bowl, Jim Hudson, a former defensive back with the New York Jets, told me, "My theory always was: If somebody was going to buy me to fall down on a pass play, I would want to know when that son of a bitch was going to pay me. Now, if you're a gambler, would you pay me before the game? No. Would you pay me at halftime? No. You would say you'll pay me after the game. Now, I'm the player, and I'm going to say, 'Do you think I'm going to wait until after the game when I'm never going to see your ass again?'

"How are you going to bribe someone? Every bookie in the world is going to know about it. And that line is going to go crazy. I don't believe that things like that went on then or now."

Nevertheless, some argue that it doesn't make any difference whether a game is fixed to anyone who doesn't know that it is. Considering the economics of bookmaking, which will be discussed at length in this book, the uninvolved and innocent bettor still has a fifty-fifty chance of winning, whether or not the game is fixed. The only people a fixed game means anything to are those who know about it. They know they have a winner. And their large bets, strategically placed around the country to avoid suspicion, simply become a part of the multi-billion dollar pool of wagers booked on every NFL game.

To them, a fixed game is like insider trading on Wall Street. Everyday, there are a handful of people who know a sure thing is going to happen before it happens. Yet, even when it does happen, the investment markets in America somehow manage to survive--and usually no one outside of the fix ever finds out about it.

There is also the contention that it has been extremely rare that a member of the organized crime gambling syndicate ordered a member of a team to throw a game or to shave points. History shows that fixers are prosecuted, and they go to jail. When a sporting event has been fixed, the public becomes disillusioned and loses confidence in the sport in which the fix occurred. That means less bookmaking volume from those who gamble and less vigorish for those who book their bets.

When I asked Baton Rouge bookmaker Gene Nolan whether he had ever known anyone who ordered a fix, he replied, "I don't know that anybody ever told anyone what to do. I think someone just found out what a member of a team was going to do--on the basis of whether the player or the coach thought he could or couldn't win. I don't think anyone ever told someone to lie down--like a fighter."

Consequently, it is naive to think that the only litmus test of honest NFL football is whether or not its games are fixed. It is not. There are far more important considerations in making this determination. And those considerations must encompass the associations of NFL personnel with the underworld and, most importantly, the backgrounds and business relationships of those who rule professional football: the NFL team owners.

The organized-crime gambling syndicate believes that inside information is necessary in order to discover what a member of a team is doing or might be doing. Aside from the rare fix, inside information is the commodity that professional gamblers will bank on. The mob wants to learn everything it can about the players' health, their marital problems, deaths in their families, drug dependencies, internal team problems, and anything else that might affect on-field performances, especially those situations that are not immediately reported in a public forum.

Los Angeles mobster-turned-government informant Jimmy Fratianno told my associate, William Scott Malone, that from personal experience inside information is key for organized-crime figures and their associates. "They get information, like, a person might know the coach, and some guy might have gotten hurt on Monday in practice, a key player. They [the team] won't reveal that until probably later on in the week, because they don't want the opposite team to get prepared for it. They get hurt on Monday; they reveal it on Thursday. Somebody finds out about it, and they bet on the game. Well, as soon as it is revealed that this person is hurt, then the odds will change. The guy that had the information already is in with maybe three or four points to the best of it."

On the importance of injury reports, Mort Olshan only partially agrees with Fratianno. "Ninety-five percent of the rumors [about injuries] are baloney and wouldn't have a bearing on the game even if they were true," Olshan says. "The most meaningful reports are those where multiple injuries occur on the same team, thereby wrecking the club's cohesiveness and causing either the defense or the offense to overwork."

Organized-crime expert G. Robert Blakey, a former top Justice Department lawyer who is now a professor of law at Notre Dame, told me, "The Mafia wants an honest game, because they know they have the contacts within the NFL teams to determine how to bet as accurately as possible. That's the only edge they need. Providing inside information happens every week of the season. And that's what goes to the heart of the integrity of the NFL."

Another top crime expert, Vincent Piersante, who headed the organized-crime unit of the Michigan attorney general's office, explained to me, "The Mafia wants ace-rock information so that they can set a realistic point-spread. They just want the public to bet. They make their ten percent commission on losing bets, so, as long as their bookmakers balance their books, what the hell do they care which team wins or loses. The old-line mob guys recognize the danger of trying to fix one game and destroying the whole structure. They just want the inside information that can help predict a player's performance."

Al Davis, the owner of the Los Angeles Raiders, also appears to agree with Fratianno, and the others about the importance of the mob's inside information: "They [the bookmakers] have contacts with every owner in the league."1

Gene Klein, the former owner of the San Diego Chargers, told me, "I've heard rumors [about fixed games], but I probably closed my mind to it. I have had people come up to me and say, 'How could the gamblers hit the points so well?' But I am convinced that most the owners are goddamn decent people.

"Yet, everybody is looking for inside information. Everyone wants the edge. That's the great thing about [the NFL's] publishing the injury reports. That's the source of information. The league is very, very forceful on that point so that everyone has the same information."

The league's former commissioner, Pete Rozelle strongly opposed legalizing sports gambling. He has said that "gambling is more serious than drugs because it goes to the integrity of the game." Rozelle knew this better than anyone. He was forced to deal with a gambling problem of one kind or another every year since he was elected the NFL's chief executive officer in 1960. The fact that most fans can't recall much about the NFL's gambling scandals is testimony to his ability to enhance the league's public image while he policed the conduct of its personnel.

"We have a basic rule in the NFL," says a former law enforcement official who advises the NFL on security matters. "It is to keep it upbeat and keep it positive. But, above all, they want to keep everything quiet."

Rozelle's ability to keep things quiet earned him criticism, as well as admiration, in some quarters. A top NFL official is adamant in his defense of Rozelle. "Why should the NFL publicize hearsay and innuendo? If the commissioner publicized a matter under investigation, that would be irresponsible. It's our policy not to create a problem that might not be there. And if it is a problem, we handle it ourselves. And if the problem hits the newspapers, then we respond publicly."

The security consultant replies, "Rozelle's job [was] that of the protector of the appearance of integrity within the NFL. To Rozelle, a problem with a player's gambling or an owner's having some Mafia associations [didn't] really become a major problem until the situation received publicity. Then he [was] forced to act in a public way.

"Rozelle is an honest guy. He [had] a long-term contract and a $500,000-a-year salary to guarantee that. But his job [was] really dependent on the goodwill of the twenty-eight owners in the NFL to whom he [was] accountable . . . And when you consider the investments they have in their teams, none of them wants bad publicity. It's bad for business."

Since the underworld's attempt to fix the NFL's 1946 championship game--after which two New York Giants players, Frank Filchock and Merle Hapes, were suspended--the league has become especially conscious of occasional maneuvers by organized-crime figures, bookmakers, and gamblers to guarantee the outcome of football games. When Bert Bell was the league's commissioner from 1946 to 1959, he maintained close contacts with members of the nation's gambling community in order to monitor unusual fluctuations in the betting line and unusually large, suspicious bets that were placed on games.

Because of the concerns of Bell and Rozelle, a notice in bold letters now hangs in every locker room to warn NFL personnel of the league's rules on gambling. The league prohibits players from betting on NFL games, from accepting bribes or agreeing to throw or fix games, from failing to promptly report offers of bribes or attempts to throw or fix games, and from associating with gamblers or with gambling activities in a manner that would discredit the NFL. "Any such conduct," reads the sign, "may result in severe penalties, up to and including a fine and/or suspension from the NFL for life."2

Rozelle's antigambling policy has been publicly supported by the NFL team managements. During my interview with Steve Gutman, the president of the New York Jets, he said, "My views about gambling are precisely those of the league. I wouldn't want to characterize them in any way to deviate from that. And I would want to stand on that."

As is well-known, defensive tackle Alex Karras of the Detroit Lions and running back Paul Hornung of the Green Bay Packers each received one-year suspensions from the NFL in 1963 because of their admitted gambling activities. Since then, only one other person has been suspended for gambling: Art Schlichter, a rookie quarterback with the Baltimore Colts. In 1983, he admitted to associating with gamblers and losing more than $700,000 in bets on NFL games and other sporting events.

As a result of the 1963 players' betting scandal, Rozelle created NFL Security and selected Jim Hamilton, the former chief of intelligence with the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), as its first director. In 1966, Hamilton, who died after a long illness, was replaced by William Hundley, the chief of Robert F. Kennedy's organized-crime division in the Justice Department. Hundley was succeeded by Jack Danahy, a New York FBI agent, in 1968. Danahy held the position until 1980, when he was followed by the current director of NFL Security, Warren Welsh, a former Miami-based FBI agent.

The directors of NFL Security have attempted to safeguard the league against the corruption of its players, trainers, coaches, owners, and referees, all of whom are potential targets for blackmail and payoffs in exchange for inside information and other favors. NFL Security is supported by a network of private investigators, mostly former officials with the Justice Department and other law-enforcement agencies, who are stationed in the twenty-six cities where the twenty-eight NFL teams are based (New York and Los Angeles each support two teams).

"These representatives are on retainer to the league, and they specifically report to the league," Warren Welsh told me. "In addition to their game-day coverage and their liaison with the local law-enforcement community, they would also do background investigations that we might have for game officials, an ownership group, impersonations, misrepresentations, whatever it might be, as opposed to just working for the local team."

The NFL, under Rozelle, followed Bert Bell's policy of maintaining regular contacts with members of the gambling underworld in order to monitor the betting on NFL games.

Warren Welsh explains, "We're very cognizant that the early line comes out on Sunday, and we have somebody in Vegas that follows that for us. And then we have our security reps all over the country report in to us, and give us the opening line. And then if there are changes in the line that are over two points, they report that immediately. If not, then the security reps report to us on Friday at about noon. And then we are able to disseminate the line and any changes to our key executives, so that they are aware of the information and any changes."

Monitoring NFL personnel, as well as the line, may be unpalatable, but it is necessary. Two years before the Schlichter suspension, several members of the Denver Broncos were quietly disciplined by the league for receiving cocaine from gambling figures. And, in 1986, the league began an investigation of Irving Fryar, a wide receiver for the New England Patriots who was accused of betting on NFL games. Fryar had been named by his team's officials as one of six Patriots players who used illegal drugs. The investigation remains open.

The conditions under which players may be compromised are clear and present in the NFL today. "Our worst case would be the athlete who is strung out on drugs and has a line of credit with his drug dealer and can't pay the bill," says Welsh. "Then he gets that knock on the door. And [the player] says, 'Hey, I told you. I can't pay the bill.' And then [the dealer] says, 'Hey, I don't want your money, but now you're going to work for us.'"

A major West Coast bookmaker agrees, "A lot of players have gotten involved in cocaine and are well over their heads--as much as ten thousand to twenty thousand dollars a month in cocaine. There is a very real danger that if they can't pay their debt, they give information and do make some mistakes in a ball game so that the dealer can make a bet and even out. And that's a great opportunity for a bookmaker, too: to set up something for a cocaine dealer and find out information that way."

Michael Roxborough of Las Vegas, who has succeeded Bobby Martin as the nation's most influential oddsmaker on NFL games, told me, "The NFL is not doing a very good job in the area of drug enforcement. But people just don't think that there is a problem with the manipulation of the outcome of NFL games. Most people think that drugs aren't a very serious problem. Until the public demands that it gets cleaned up, the NFL isn't going to feel that it has to do very much."

Former Olympic gold medalist Bob Hayes, who was also a receiver for the Dallas Cowboys and pleaded guilty to setting up a cocaine deal after he retired from football, told me, "It goes a lot further than just saying 'no' to drugs. And the NFL has been unrealistic about that because they treat drug abuse as a problem, not a disease. The use of drugs is a disease. And when you have a disease, you are a sick person and you need to get well. Until then, people are going to try to take advantage of you."

Criticism of the NFL's security system is generally not targeted at the commissioner or the security director. Instead, it's directed at the NFL owners, who establish the league's policies.

Aaron Kohn, the former executive director of the Metropolitan Crime Commission of New Orleans, told me, "They [the NFL owners] have a tendency to employ as security people former FBI agents and other people of confidence who do competent investigations and do accumulate adverse information. But at the policy-making level, the decisions are not made consistent with the fact-finding.

"I know that the NFL can't go too far. They are going to do whatever they have to to prevent the problems of their owners and players and their overall profits from becoming subjects of public scrutiny."

Some critics say that the league enforces its rules selectively. "Rozelle [couldn't] enforce the rules against the owners because he [worked] for them," Gene Upshaw, the executive director of the NFL Players Association (NFLPA) and a former all-pro guard for the Oakland Raiders, told me. "There's no way he [could] say, 'I'm going to punish you because you own a racetrack, because you're involved in Las Vegas, or because you do business with people who are involved in gambling.' But I would like to think that the rules of suspension and banishment should also apply to the owners."

One top NFL official says, "We've had owners that have supposedly been friends or associates of mobsters, and when we looked into it they had dinner in a restaurant, maybe four or five times in a year." Nevertheless, the NFL did nothing about these owners who socialized with underworld figures.

Another football insider says that many investigations of NFL owners have ended up in "a black hole" and were never disclosed. "To me," he says, "NFL Security is a special police force that monitors the players but protects the owners. It's one thing to monitor the activities of the players, because they come and go. It's quite another to monitor the activities of the owners. They seem to last forever."

Patrick Healy, the former executive director of the Chicago Crime Commission, told me, "The NFL tries to give you the public Kiwanis Club talk: 'We have very little gambling; we have very little drugs. We have everything under control. We have FBI agents working for us, and whenever any rumor comes out they pounce on it. They discover it. They investigate it.' Actually, the whole thing is really just a witch tale."

Former Senate investigator Phil Manuel, another critic of the NFL security system, told me, "The oldest trick in the world is to hire old Justice Department officials and then make them understand that the security they are to protect is the security of the NFL owners.

"These retired law enforcement guys maintain their ties to their old agencies, and they can then tell which investigations are being done and whether they might be troublesome. When some wrongdoing is ready to go public, the NFL Security people can go to their old fellow workers and say, 'We can handle this ourselves. Give us a chance to straighten the mess out without all the attention your public investigation will bring.'"

Ralph Salerno, the former chief of detectives for the New York Police Department, goes even further. "How does the NFL protect itself with one guy in each NFL city? They do it illegally. The local NFL Security guy takes the local police commissioner, the chief of detectives, and any other important law enforcement official and gives him season tickets and box seats. They get wined and dined and taken out to play golf.

"And then these public employees who are paid with public funds come up with criminal information and turn it over to profit-making corporations, like the New York Giants, the Cincinnati Bengals, and so on. And that is illegal. Do the police do that for every trucking company or every furniture manufacturer? Of course not. It would be illegal for them to do it with anyone. But they do it for the NFL. That whole NFL Security operation that Rozelle [bragged] about is simply an illegal operation."

Welsh defends the current system. He insists that he is a "fact finder" and has never been asked to halt an investigation of any NFL personnel. "And there have never been any roadblocks put up in my path in terms of investigating anything that would have to do with a member club--whether it was a player, coach, or an owner."

That might be true: Warren Welsh and his predecessors have all been men of high integrity. But they have had no final decision-making powers. Thus, the real question is: What have their bosses, the NFL owners, done once they received the results of their investigations?

The evidence is clear that they have protected themselves and their investments--sometimes to the detriment of the sport they represent.

Endnotes

1. Deposition of Allen Davis, Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Commission v. National Football League, U.S. District Court, Central District of California, Civil Action No. 78-3523-HP.

2. In the standard NFL players' contract, there is a section, entitled "Integrity of Game," that reads: "Player recognizes the detriment to the League and professional football that would result from impairment of public confidence in the honest and orderly conduct of NFL games or the integrity and good character of NFL players. Player therefore acknowledges his awareness that if he accepts a bribe or agrees to throw or fix an NFL game; fails to promptly report a bribe offer or an attempt to throw or fix an NFL game; bets on an NFL game; knowingly associates with gamblers or gambling activity; uses or provides other players with stimulants or other drugs for the purpose of attempting to enhance on-field performance; or is guilty of any other form of conduct reasonably judged by the League Commissioner to be detrimental to the League of professional football, the Commissioner will have the right, but only after giving Player the opportunity for a hearing at which he may be represented by counsel of his choice, to fine Player in a reasonable amount; to suspend Player for a period certain or indefinitely; and/or to terminate this contract."
 

bigunreal

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Joined
Oct 21, 2004
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Thanks for that, white is right. Interesting stuff.

A few points. Dan Moldea is a dishonest hack, who has a history of dancing around a real issue, teasing readers into thinking he's going to expose something and then ultimately backing the status quo. His book on the RFK assassination is a classic example of this. Robert Blakey, for those who may not know, was the primary architect of the continuing coverup of the JFK assassination by the House Assassinations Select Committee, in his position as chief counsel.

If these games are fixed, I can only speculate as to how many, if any, players are even privy to it. However, much as we understand what forces would be aligned against a white player who publicly complained about discrimation in the NFL, we ought to be able to see that any players attempting to expose fixed games would be dealt with at least as harshly. Remember Bubba Smith? Haven't seen him in any more awful movies or beer commercials since he mouthed off about Super Bowl III being fixed.
 
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