By: Steven G. Folmar
You can check out Dom's initial reaction at:
http://www.voicesays.com/
Now that the smoke
has cleared (mostly), I wanted to add a little bit to what Dominic had said
about the ill-fated strike that severely affected the Pittsburgh Power’s
season.
Having coached in the Arena
Football League and the
arena football league 2, I had the
unique experience of seeing the locker room drama that unfolds when strike talk
comes up.
In
2000, I was in college at Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania when I got an
internship to work in football operations for the Arena Football League’
Buffalo Destroyers.
I remember being on cloud nine after being
accepted, sitting on my bed watching ESPN when across the scroll at the bottom
of the screen said “Arena Football League Season Cancelled Due to Strike”.
I was aghast, and I couldn’t wait to Monday
morning to call and find out if it was true.
When I called, the coach told me that a lot of it was just bluster and
the season would go as planned, so in the summer of 2000 I got an apartment at
the foot of the
Peace Bridge to
Canada
in
Buffalo.
Throughout the season there were player meetings
on the subject, and some became very contentious.
I remember once the new deal was ratified,
the league said that almost an entire majority had voted for it, which for me
was very surprising, since it sure seemed 50/50 in the Destroyers’ locker room.
During that time, our quarterback,
Browning Nagle, was very much for the
Union,
other players, not so much.
Many felt
the union was taking dues and not offering anything in return.
I
don’t know what it is about quarterbacks that get themselves into these
things.
Maybe because they often have to
be so vocal of leaders for their teams.
But it was no surprise that quarterback Kyle Rowley was at the center of
the debate in
Orlando.
Being out of the loop for a bit, I was
totally caught off guard by the strike talk on Friday night.
I actually had just gotten home from work 30
or 40 minutes before kickoff and was anxious to see the game on the NFL
Network.
It was then I took a quick peek
at my Facebook and saw the explosion of comments from many of my friends with
Arena Football experience.
I think the
guys at the Network did a great job considering they had no rosters and little
forewarning.
In
a situation like this, where both sides play the public relations “Spin” game,
my opinion is there is more than enough blame to go on both sides.
I really don’t have much respect for people
that can’t serve out their contracts.
If
you are working in squalor, or a sweat shop, I can understand complaining and
threatening with a union or a strike, but not in professional sports.
If you sign your name to a contract, you play
it out…period.
Guys complain when they
are exceeding expectation, but they see things as being “just the way it goes”
when they can’t live up to cushy new contracts (anyone seen Larry Johnson
lately).
In business, you don’t finish
out you contract, you get your but drug into a courtroom.
In professional sports, teams almost always
give in.
I would really like to see some
people stand their ground.
Let the guy
sit out and save yourself some money.
Not that I am against players making their money.
I am talking about once you sign a contract,
you live buy it.
Try going into McDonalds
or Wal-Mart and tell them you want employees like you to be making 50.1% or 29%
of all income the company makes.
See how
long it takes to get thrown out on your butt.
Athletes say the leagues are based on their names.
Any business is built on the hard work of the
people who staff it.
That argument doesn’t
work either.
Or my favorite, “People
come to watch me play”.
And if you
aren’t there, people will come anyway. I love Hines Ward, but you know what,
Heinz Field is going to be packed this year without him as well.
And these guys who think they can’t be
replaced, I will find 10 guys now who would be glad to be out on that field for
what you are making.
And if you gave
them a few years, they would have recognizable names too.
In the AFL, those guys signed contracts
knowing there was a good chance they would have to strike at some point.
If you don’t like the paying rate, you go
elsewhere or you do something else.
Rowley,
Pittsburgh’s
original quarterback, doesn’t seem real apologetic about his role either.
You can see his interview here:
But
to be fair, I didn’t think that things were handled real well by the League or
the Power either. I would think it would be obvious with everyone at pre-game
meal the team was at least going to play that night’s game. To walk in and make
statements in that environment really raises class questions. That sure comes off to be people playing
“mine’s bigger!” And as for the league
and President Jerry Kurz, my personal feelings aside, Jerry Kurz is for Jerry
Kurz. I don’t know Mr. Shaner, I love that he helped bring Arena Football back
to Pittsburgh,
and he had reason to be angry. Obviously there was static between he and
Rowley. This was an opportunity for the Power organization to really come out
smelling like roses, the game may have been played with scabs, but they would
have looked like a team that was blindsided by a bunch of money hungry football
players. Instead Shaner really looks
like a, well…not so nice guy, forcing the players who stuck with the strike to
find their own way home from Orlando. This should have been people sitting down
before the flight home and talking like adults.
But hey, our congress can’t figure that out, probably a lot to ask our
professional sports teams to either. But I think Pittsburgh earned their black eye with how
this was handled as well.
One
final question I have is how this will affect the Power moving on in 2012?
With a proven, championship quarterback at
the helm in Rowley, head coach Chris Siegfried’s team was poised to be a
legitimate contender. Now, Shaner has declared that Rowley will never play in
Pittsburgh so Siegfried
has to rally the troops around journeyman QB Andrico Hines.
Does Shaner give Siegfried a mulligan if the
Power suffers?
Needless to say, should
be an interesting season.