Professional Football Salary Cap
In the National Football League, (NFL) the nostalgia that fills the air during a big game is so thick you could practically cut it with a knife. Even with the increasingly high prices for tickets, food, souvenirs and parking, faithful sports goers continue to fill stadiums every Sunday. From draft day to the Super Bowl, the all mighty dollar tends to be what makes the game what it is today. Spending the large sum of cash to draft that number one quarterback who may never amount to anything spectacular in the big leagues is what keeps the true fan coming back each year. Although this may slightly reduce the fan base, the NFL could regulate the amount of money paid out to players, this would eliminate the view that players are more interested in the money rather than the love of the game; this will also make all teams more competitive around the league.
Each year, all 32 teams run out of the locker room in week one with the same goal in mind, “Winning the big game.” All in hopes that the money invested in the new players as well as the veterans was money well spent. Millions and sometimes billions of dollars are passed around each year to pay player’s salaries and uphold the contractual agreements. Many times, a rookie straight out of college gets a big-ticket payday to come play with the big boys. Still having not proved themselves in the NFL, new draftees receive a high dollar price tag due to popularity and assumptions that the performance on the field in years to come will be spectacular. It is a cutthroat business that whoever has the deepest pockets has the advantage of winning. According to G. Knapp, of the San Francisco Chronicle, “A rookie salary cap wouldn't eliminate the viciousness, but it would remove some dysfunction from the draft process.”San Francisco Chronicle, (2010, p. B.1) “For a while now, Draft Day has been fueled by an unhealthy obsession with quarterbacks.” San Francisco Chronicle, (2010,p. B.1)...