Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The NFL preseason shows all its ills in one night

- PAUL NEWBERRY

Cam Newton hobbling to the locker room, the recipient of an unnecessar­y injury in an unnecessar­y game.

A cash-grab in Canada, leading to what didn’t even qualify as a glorified scrimmage on an 80-yard field.

The Falcons charging top dollar to cheer for a quarterbac­k last seen trying to make the Patriots as a receiver. Stop the madness. The NFL preseason needs to go.

If there was any way to cancel the final week of friendlies, that would be just fine with us. Since such an option isn’t really feasible, let’s make it the swan song for what has become the height of the league’s arrogance: a monthlong slog of meaningles­s exhibition­s that serve no discernibl­e purpose other than ill-gotten gain for billionair­e owners.

At least they had the right idea in Philadelph­ia, where a preseason game between the Eagles and the Baltimore Ravens was halted with nearly 12 minutes remaining. Allegedly, there was lightning in the area. Maybe someone just forgot to turn off the flash on their cellphone. Whatever the case, no one really complained.

In case you missed it — and we hope you did — the penultimat­e round of exhibition games began Thursday night with needless pain and drama for one of the league’s most prominent players, a debacle north of the border that was right out of the playbook of a fledgling startup like the short-lived Alliance of American Football, and more than enough “who the heck is that?” moments to persuade even the most diehard of preseason supporters (seriously, does such a person even exist?) there must be a better way to get ready for the actual season.

Let’s start in Foxborough, where Newton dropped back to pass for the Carolina Panthers, got tripped up by a New England rusher and tumbled to the turf with a sprained left foot. The 2015 NFL MVP already was coming off an injury plagued season. Now, this. Newton left the stadium in a walking boot and didn’t speak with reporters, though general manager Marty Hurney is “cautiously optimistic” he’ll be ready for the Sept. 8 regular-season opener against the Los Angeles Rams.

Moving on to Winnipeg, where football is normally played on 110-yard fields and features the rouge, they came up with a set of rules that aren’t used on either side of the border for the Caesars Palace Raiders vs. the Green Bay Packers Junior Varsity. You see, they had to take up the goalposts used for Canadian Football League games, since those would’ve been in the middle of the end zones on an NFL field. Trouble is, they apparently covered those spots with some shag carpet left over from a 1970s bedroom. Both teams expressed concerns about the safety of the turf, so the field was hastily shortened to 80 yards and there were no kickoffs.

In keeping with the amateurish feel of the game, the Packers decided to sit 33 players, including star quarterbac­k Aaron Rodgers and running back Aaron Jones. (Rodgers, it should be noted, hasn’t played at all during the preseason, so he’s got the right idea.) The Raiders countered with a B-team of their own, sending out a lineup that didn’t include quarterbac­k Derek Carr or receiver Antonio Brown (we won’t even get into that).

The preseason needs to go.

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