I like the Raider attitude though,especially watching the old games from the 70's, they were mean and dirty motherfuckers!! lol,thats why I like them, especailly the 70's Raiders, they cheated by hurting people,being hard ass mean dudes!! Thats some real smashmouth football they played, and dudes would get broken teeth and other shit, get some good opiates in the locker room and come back and play..lol..the NFL in the 70's and maybe 80's i dunno handed hurt players pain meds like candy or gave them a shot IV style of morphine or something strong and send them back out to play..lotta players popped uppers before games,etc.. crazy times ..
when football player do more than play football. Maybe someday Il. give a shit.. Till then I dont think so.. Some the most super human men on the planet do nothing but play games.. haha what a fucking joke./. It would be interesting to see what could be done with all that human energy on a farm to produce food for people.. nope... maybe even donate some their pay checks and build homes together.... hahaha That will be the day..
No its better to use that money to fight dogs Although i dont follow football enough to be able to name exact people, there are players that give back to their community.
a very limited few.. and its usually the ones in the low salary brackets.. Where does all the money the NFL collects in fines go? The NFL site was no help at all. I then turned to my friend Google and found a few things: No one knows how much they collect each year: You have to add up the numbers manually. Even when you do that there is no official number published concerning how much they collect in total:"We're not going to break out every little detail," says NFL spokesman Greg Aiello. No one knows where the money goes: I found a couple of results that say the money goes to charity or even the disabled players association, but no definitive resource. I need to follow up on this. It would seem odd if the team or the league kept the money. Fines are just public relations: In most cases fines are reduced or removed after the publicity surrounding the event dies down. Since the NFL doesn't report on reductions you don't know how much a player does pay. One thing that might cause people to be upset is that NFL fines might be tax deductible. The TaxProf blog had a running thread discussing the issue and the verdict they reached is that you can deduct them.