Ask an NFL fan what they think about Thursday Night Football and they'll likely screw up their face like they just smelled something stinky. Unappetizing matchups unentertaining games and an awkward time slot all combine to make the NFL's only in house game product significantly less appealing than the usual Sunday slate.
So how come ratings were up 10 percent this season over last season per Awful Announcing
There is a popular outcry that the games are no good the teams look unprepared and the players per Robert Klemko of The MMQB say it feels horrible to prepare for a game on short rest.
USA TODAY SportsThe NFL though cares only about maximizing the revenue it can wring out of those players the NFL is considering expanding the Thursday Night Football slate and selling off an eight game package to the highest bidder per The Wall Street Journal. With doubleheaders on many Thursday nights the league could land a new broadcast rights windfall and still have games left over to show on NFL Network.
All of that will be for naught though if the product is substandard and people stop tuning in.
Just how much worse is Thursday Night Football for players and fans
Injuries
The biggest complaint about Thursday Night Football from players and fans alike is the apparent increase in injuries.
Mark Sandritter of SB Nation compiled a great list of quotes from players and coaches about the extra strain Thursday games put on players' bodies especially when contrasted with the NFL's supposed focus on player safety.
Christian Petersen/Getty ImagesI'm trying not to get fined now Arizona Cardinals head coach Bruce Arians told Reggie Hayes of The News Sentinel in 2012 while serving as interim head coach of the Indianapolis Colts.
The recovery time from Sunday to Thursday is ridiculous especially after playing a very physical game and then to have to travel Arians said. When you add the travel in you may get some swelling out of your body but on that airplane you're going to swell right back up.
As unpleasant as the Thursday Night Football experience may be does it actually lead to more injuries
In 2012 it did not according to NFL injury data (via Klemko). The league found Klemko wrote that roughly the same amount of injuries happened in 2012 Thursday games (5.2 per game) as in games played on Saturday Sunday and Monday (5.3).
It may be harder for players to get their bodies right on short rest but there's no data to show that injuries actually occur more often on Thursday night games.
Mistakes
There have been some real stinkers in the Thursday Night Football lineup this season it's no surprise that two teams who barely have time to work up a game plan will make a lot of mistakes.
I compared the 2013 rate of TNF interceptions fumbles fumbles lost times sacked and sack yardage lost to the NFL season averages for all. Here's what I found
Ty Schalter/Bleacher ReportStunningly there's almost no deviation from the season long league wide averages per Pro Football Reference.
Only a slight dip in times sacked per game (from 3.1 to 2.5) and an accompanying drop in sack yardage lost differentiate the two sets of numbers. Though the sample size is just 13 games these per game mistake rates are eerily similar to the league wide season long averages.
What about a Thursday Night Football hangover Do teams suffer after going through a short rest/long rest cycle
As it turns out the answer is no. So far this season Thursday Night Football teams are 13 13 in the following week and outscore their opponents by the slimmest of margins 23.6 average points per game against 22.2.
That's slightly off the league wide pace of 23.7 average points per game per Pro Football Reference but I'd more quickly chalk that up to small sample size than any kind of Thursday Night Football hangover.
Matchups
So if injuries and mistakes on Thursday Night Football aren't the issue what's the real problem
Well it could be the matchups. After Monday Night Football and Sunday Night Football get the league's best guesses as to what will be compelling games (with spotty success) Thursday Night Football often gets the dregs.
Even when a promising matchup was in the cards the games were major disappointments.
The very first Thursday Night Football game this season was a much anticipated rematch of one of the wildest playoff games in recent memory the Denver Broncos vs. the Baltimore Ravens. Instead of delivering another fantastic finish though Peyton Manning and the Broncos clinically blew the Ravens out 49 27.
The second game a promising rivalry game between the New York Jets and New England Patriots was an ugly low scoring affair that finished 13 10 with only 550 total yards between the two teams. Geno Smith threw three interceptions and Tom Brady had one of his least effective days as a pro 19 of 39 for just 185 yards and one touchdown.
The Week 10 fixture Minnesota vs. Washington probably looked like a good game when the schedule was set up with both teams coming off of 10 6 seasons and playoff appearances. Instead two teams that are now 7 20 1 faced off and the 34 27 result didn't mean much to either team.
It's games like these exciting matchups that fizzle uninspiring matchups that meet expectations that give Thursday Night Football a bad name.
Perception is Reality
The reality is there are boring and disappointing games in the regular Sunday slate too. They don't stick in our mind as often because we can just flip the channel and watch another game.
In this way expanding the Thursday Night Football slate can only help a second game on the same night reduces the odds fans are stuck watching a stinker.
Then again a big part of football's popularity is built on its easy fit into our hectic modern lives. With NFL football taking up all of Sunday plus Monday and Thursday evenings plus college football's grip on he Saturday market the crush of football overload may eventually impact ratings.
Ultimately even if fans players and coaches all can't stand Thursday Night Football it brings in eyeballs like crazy and broadcasters are more than willing to pay for eyeballs. According to John Ourand of Sports Business Daily quoted via Klemko the NFL could net $700 million or more for a slate of eight games.
As the players must get an average of 47 percent of all revenues back as salary over the life of the current CBA per Pro Football Talk that's a salary cap spike of about $10.3 million per team.
That will make some of the players' aches and pains feel a little bit more worth it.
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