Lost in all the outrage over the New Orleans Saints' bounty program is a conversation about money and what it means to professional athletes. The sums that we've been hearing about—anywhere in the range of $1,000 to $10,000 to knock out opposing players—sound substantial to the typical American. But the average NFL player makes just short of $2 million, while the median salary is around $800,000.
Not relevant to the matter at hand. Bounties are illegal whether they are for $1 or $5,000,000,000,000,000,000.
In addition to this, the mention of how paltry the bounty amounts are suggests that there is no incentive for these players. These players are naturally aggressive; Ray Lewis wants to knock the QB's head off in every play regardless of what he gets paid to do it.
If that's the case, then why have a bounty system in the first place? Why implement something illegal if it's going to have absolutely no effect, and the players are still going to gun for other players just like they would in any other game? It makes no sense for coaches and players to start something like a bounty system if they truly aren't paying attention to it and don't care about it.
Non-contract bonuses are common in the locker room. Not every reward is based on aggression. Some have to do with composure. If you get cheap-shotted and you don't retaliate, you get a handful of cash. If you cause a fumble in practice, you get paid. (And if you're the fumbler, you pay up.)
Common or not, they're still now allowed. Speeding is common, but try telling that to the next officer who writes you a speeding ticket.
Did Gregg Williams, by allegedly offering up cash for violent hits, make the game more dangerous?
There was a bounty for taking people out of the game due to injury, and even one specifically for causing a player to be carted off due to injury. It wasn't simply for a "violent hit." Deadspin definitely did spin that one.
Did they make the game more dangerous? You tell me. Anthony Hargrove gets a late hit on Favre in 2009, resulting in an injury to his ankle; Favre turns out to be a named target in said bounties. Not enough proof? Let's look at the number of first downs given up via penalty prior to 2009, and during the bounty system from 2009 - 2011:
2006: 18
2007: 12
2008: 19
2009: 24
2010: 29
2011: 38
The three year average from 2006 - 2008 was 16.3. After the bounty system was in place in 2009-2011? Three year average is 30.3, almost double what it was before. Nah, the game's not more dangerous with an increase in helmet to helmet hits, late hits, crack back blocks, chop blocks, etc. These rules are silly in the first place, and they already get violated, so what's the big deal about an increase in illegal hits intended to cart someone off the field?
I find it unlikely that a player would focus on injuring an opponent in defiance of the referees on the field, the league office that reviews every hit, and the peers to whom he must answer every day and who don't take kindly to cheap shots.
The number of penalties that they incurred from 2009 and onward suggest otherwise. Not to mention the actions of Anthony Hargrove, who ecstatically screamed, "Favre is out of the game! Favre is done! Favre is done!" after he
injured another player on a
late hit.
Nooo, players would never disregard referees and then be happy about the results of their illegal in-game actions. Never.