Deion definitely had his game on tonight

SHMUP sale page.Randorama wrote:ban CMoon for being a closet Jerry Falwell cockmonster/Ann Coulter fan, Nijska a bronie (ack! The horror!), and Ed Oscuro being unable to post 100-word arguments without writing 3-pages posts.
Eugenics: you know it's right!
Well, at least Erickson and Donahue are gone.IlMrm wrote:Ahhh, another 49er Faithful. We are all stuck in York's void.
Yes, this year's Super Bowl is indeed pretty good. Philly made it a much closer game then people expected. And what was Mitchell's final stat line? It's so amusing when a backup underachiever talks smack.
No skills?Super Laydock wrote:Super Bowl?
Isn't that when those guys afraid of REAL Rugby stand up in their fancy protective suits pretending they're really though? Yeah I am BIG (fat!) enough to be a defender person, but there's no skills involved doing that!
NFL ("american "football") is for pussies! IMO
SHMUP sale page.Randorama wrote:ban CMoon for being a closet Jerry Falwell cockmonster/Ann Coulter fan, Nijska a bronie (ack! The horror!), and Ed Oscuro being unable to post 100-word arguments without writing 3-pages posts.
Eugenics: you know it's right!
...coming up with the right steroid mix to avoid being caught during testing...choreography to ensure the most irritating endzone dances...hiring the right lawyer after committing multiple felonies...specific diet plans to put into effect before defecating into a former girlfirend's laundry basket...y2kgamer wrote:American football requires a lot of strategy and skill. There are numerous defensive and offensive formations for numerous situations...then there are rushing plays, passing plays, reverses, play action plays, and trick plays...
Do you have any idea how much physical and mental conditioning good NFL players have to go through? It requires a lot of hard work and mental discipline. They've got to practice, life weights, study film, memorize plays and learn how to adapt to the other team's strategy on their feet. And then they've got to put their bodies on the line for 5 months against the best football players in the world.BulletMagnet wrote:Perhaps, but you'd still think that when these guys are making the kind of ridiculous money they are for the type of laughably unimportant "work" that they do, they'd have some incentive to act at least semi-sensibly. Then again, it's the fans that are willing to pay out such ludicrous amounts of cash for tickets and merchandise in the face of the stupid things these people do regardless of the charmed lives they lead, so until the public starts to actually do something about this nothing's going to change.
I don't argue that these guys have to extensively train and whatnot to be good at what they do, and that they put in a lot of effort when they play, but my point is that they are paid VERY well for what they do while many other more vital careers go woefully unrespected and underpaid...in spite of all this, a notable amount of athletes (though, as you say, not all), still seem to feel entitled to do whatever they please. Which leads me to...y2kgamer wrote:Do you have any idea how much physical and mental conditioning good NFL players have to go through?
Perhaps we've been reading different newspapers, but from what I've seen professional athletes, as most celebrities do, get a HUGE amount of leeway when it comes to criminal acts, drug-related or not...suspended for a few games, maybe, or given a slap-on-the-wrist fine, but they rarely ever end up doing time or being fired, and even then it's usually only after they've been caught several times already.In any job... you're FIRED if you're caught doing drugs.
And I'd agree without hesitation. I enjoy the results of the designers' work, obviously, and also have a certain amount of admiration for those who are able to design and execute a game very well, but I'm definitely not under the illusion that their line of work is all that important in the grand scheme of things.Based on your "logic" that professional sports is a "type of laughably unimportant work..."I could make the same argument about anything in the entertainment industry including video games.