November 23, 1997. It was just like any other Sunday in the NFL. Almost.
Following his team's 20-3 loss to Atlanta, New Orleans Saints coach Mike Ditka was the
epitome of a beaten man. The coach known throughout the years as both a disciplinarian
and a hard-nosed fighter said he was ready to throw in the towel.
"Maybe this game has passed me by...I thought I could touch people, but I don't reach
(the players) anymore," a subdued and frustrated Ditka told reporters after the loss. "I
feel like I failed this football team."
"If it doesn't mean that much to other people, why should it mean that much to me," the
former Chicago Bears coach added. "I think that's what happened to me today...for the
first time in my life, I can say that. It didn't mean anything."
The response from his players?
"What am I supposed to do?" replied defensive tackle Wayne Martin.
"Whatever happens, happens." added offensive lineman Joe Johnson.
With an apathetic attitude like that, is it any wonder that the Saints were a dismal 4-8
following the game, and had committed more turnovers than any other team in the NFL?
Later that same evening, the New York Giants and Washington Redskins were knotted at
seven apiece in overtime. With roughly 3:00 to go in the extra period, 'Skins wideout
Michael Westbrook pulled in a pass near the New York 30-yard line but was ruled out of
bounds. Westbrook ripped off his helmet in protest and was flagged with a 15-yard
unsportsmanlike conduct foul. His selfish and immature tantrum essentially took
Washington out of field goal range and forced them to settle for a tie in a game they
should have won.
And we, as sports fans, wonder what's wrong with professional sports today?
Clearly it is self-centered acts like these that has cost the game valuable followers. To
borrow an old adage, there is no "I" in "team", but Westbrook, Martin, and many like them
have had little trouble finding the "m" and the "e".
Lest these individuals forget that being a professional athlete is a privilage, and with
it comes responsibilities -- responsibilities to their coaches, their families, their
fans, and their teammates. Once a person, regardless of profession, signs a contract,
they are legally obligated to fulfill the terms of that contract. This is a concept
obviously lost on some athletes, who feel they deserve an exemption to the rule as they
hold out while demanding more money.
Don't get me wrong -- I'm not jumping on the athlete-bashing bandwagon. But for every
Grant Hill there's a Dennis Rodman. For every Barry Sanders there's a Michael Irvin. For
every hard-working, dedicated player who is an upstanding citizen, there are spoiled,
overpaid, undisciplined athlete who care more about shoe contracts than winning.
And it's just a damn shame.