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Right now is the annual peak for coach obsession, as NFL teams fire and hire head coaches. Practically every aspect of American society has in recent decades become overblown pumped up with money, media focus and popular fixation. Coaching is no exception. Coaches at all levels of sports have changed from figures frowning on the sidelines to celebrities who receive high pay, sign endorsement deals and are spoken of as possessing mystical abilities. NFL head coaches now earn at least $1 million per season,and several earn $4 million or more; dozens of college football coaches now earn more than the president of their colleges; in an increasing number of high schools, the best-paid person is the football coach. Beyond money, there's an increasing sense that having top coaches is essential to the well-being of a city, college or high school. Coaches, especially football coaches, have never been a hotter commodity. Why?
Let me propose that the current national obsession with coaches reflects these themes:
• The illusion of control.
• The abdication by politicians and intellectuals of the father-figure role.
• The exaggeration of insider knowledge.
• The illusion of special motivational ability.
• The winner-take-all of modern economics.
• The Walter Mitty daydream.
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This week: Gregg Easterbrook on ...
• Stats of the week • Cheerleader of the week • Sweet 'N' Sour of the week • Fanfare about a fanfare • Jersey/B at New England analysis • Dallas at Seattle analysis • Thoughts on Nick Saban • TMQ player of the year • Jersey/A at Philadelphia analysis • Kansas City at Indianapolis analysis |
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| Giants' coach Steve Owen came along before the $25 million coaching contract. |
Next is the winner-take-all aspect of modern economics, nodding here to Robert Frank of Cornell University, who has documented this phenomenon. Coaches at the top of pro and college football today earn 50 times what a high school varsity football coach earns. Not a single one of the top pro or college coaches is 50 times more able than the typical high school coach. I'd estimate that today's very best football coaches, such as Bill Belichick or Carroll, are approximately twice as good at what they do than any high school football coach who won a 4A or 5A state championship this fall but Belichick and Carroll earn 50 times as much. At the high school, small-college, big-college and NFL level there are several thousand skilled, competent football coaches of approximately equal ability coaching skill at the small-college level is especially overlooked. Of the several thousand able football coaches, a handful become rich while the rest labor for typical wages. This distorts our perspective of coaches, as winner-take-all economics distorts our perspective of Hollywood figures, CEOs, rock stars and the rest.
Finally there is Walter Mitty's daydream. We can't imagine actually becoming an NFL player, because we're not strong enough or fast enough. We can't imagine becoming a movie star because we're not good-looking enough, or becoming a pop star because we know we can't sing. The sports coach, on the other hand, has no special physical abilities or God-given gifts. Coaches can't run a 4.4 or hit a high note. I could be like him, I could run that team is in a lot of fans' minds. We don't imagine ourselves actually becoming Supreme Court justices and heart surgeons because we know professions like these involve many years of intense study and training. Coaching, on the other hand, seems like something almost anyone could learn. In the end, we revere coaches as persons of incredible prowess when really they are not all that different from the typical man or woman. And they would prefer this not be generally understood, thank you.
In other news, in the NFC wild-card playoffs on Saturday, why didn't Dallas pull the goalie? Down 21-20 with seven seconds remaining, Seattle punting from its 28, the 'Boys' sole realistic hope was a blocked punt. Yet Dallas had a return man back, and he did nothing but watch the kick bounce out of bounds at midfield. Then for the final snap, Seattle did what Oklahoma failed to do against Boise State in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl lined up its defenders on the goal line. In both cases, the opposition was at midfield on the final down, needing to reach the end zone. Oklahoma put its deepest defenders at the 15, gave up the touchdown, and went on to lose in overtime. Seattle lined up three men along the goal line, stopped the pass and won. In a situation where the opponent must score a long touchdown on the final snap, your defenders belong on the goal line.
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| Bill Belichick and the Patriots upset the Chargers 24-21 in a playoff game in San Diego last season. |
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| While the Eagles' cheerleaders showed some skin, Donovan McNabb dressed for cross-country skiing. |
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| A psychology-major cheer: Our hands are high, our feet are low, there are issues with your ego. |
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| Aaron Copland intended to celebrate the common person, not the political hack. |
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| Robert Nardelli made $275,000 per day. But there's no problem with CEO pay, no sir. |
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| Hey, who booted my jet? I thought this space was legal! |
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| Seattle's coaches considered having her play corner. |
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| Chips keep getting cheaper and better; if only we could say the same for stamps. |
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| You can trust Little Nicky to stay at Alabama, because he promised to. |
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| Meryl Streep has signed to play the title role in "The Nick Saban Story." |
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| Recruiters from the BBC have made illegal contact with Smash Williams. |
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| When we find the 95 percent of the universe that's missing, we will find a huge mass of socks, house keys and youth. |