New Orleans Saints' Brees and Strief call out NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell

There are players in the NFL, Richard Sherman and Odell Beckham, Jr. to name a couple, from whom you expect outspoken criticism of the NFL’s leadership. Drew Brees and Zach Strief? Not so much.

Yet on Tuesday, November 8 an article landed on ESPN.com from New Orleans Saints beat writer Mike Triplett with some comments from Brees and Strief regarding NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell that demonstrate the dire state in which the NFL is finding itself under his leadership.

From the Saints’ own Bountygate scandal to Tom Brady and Deflategate and from the domestic abuse cases of former Baltimore Raven Ray Rice and former New York Giants kicker Josh Brown, accusations of overofficiating, blown calls, the league becoming know as the “No Fun League”, Goodell’s leadership is being called into question.

The article is a must read and can be found here.

Some quotes from the article from Saints quarterback Drew Brees:

Brees went on to say:

SANTA CLARA, CA – NOVEMBER 06: Head coach Sean Payton of the New Orleans Saints talks to Drew Brees

Those are some very bold statements and will certainly cause some ripples in the league going forward. The NFL’s owners will let a lot of things slide but, with declining TV viewership directly affecting their pocketbooks, Goodell may be nearing the end of his tenure as commissioner.

Saints right tackle Zach Strief, currently the team’s player representative, added:

Certainly there’s a cloud over Roger Goodell’s time as NFL Commissioner. There seem to be more penalties being called than ever, players aren’t allowed to celebrate scoring, no one is sure what a catch is anymore.

With the current hopes that the NFL can spread to Europe and other markets in the future, it would greatly benefit Goodell and the NFL ownership to watch some European soccer games and see what the fans overseas expect. The top soccer leagues in the world in Germany (Bundesliga), France (Ligue 1), Italy (Serie A), England (Premier League) and Spain (La Liga) feature a game that is fluid, exciting and one in which celebrations are big, as they should be.

Oct 29, 2016; London, United Kingdom; Conceptual rendering of Tottenham Hotspur Stadium scheduled to open in 2018 that will play host to two NFL games over a 10-year period as a partnership with the English Premier League team on display during the NFL International Series Fan Rally at the Victoria House. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

To sell a game to Europeans featuring frequent stops for penalties, intrusive TV commercials and tamed down celebrations is a fool’s errand. Expansion, hard enough as it is, under the guidance of Goodell may be too high a hill to climb. If Americans are losing interest how can it be expected that the rest of the world will be any different?

The NFL ownership is surely taking notice. If Goodell stays on as commissioner in 2017 it will certainly be under some new mandates to fix the damage done to this point. But it would be surprising to no one if the group decided to move on with another choice who can revive what was once seen as a product which would continue its dominance for the foreseeable future.

The chinks in the armor of the NFL as exposed by current TV ratings declines may be attributable to things out of Goodell’s control, the election, millennials’ focus on other forms of media, etc. But, ultimately, the buck stops at the desk of Roger Goodell. And with calm and respected voices like Brees and Strief questioning his leadership, the writing would seem to be on the wall for the end of his regime.

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