The Denver Post

Where have the stars gone?

- By Barry Wilner

In case you haven’t noticed, which is virtually impossible, Peyton Manning has gone to TV commercial­s full time.

Adrian Peterson and J.J. Watt are injured. Aaron Rodgers is struggling. Todd Gurley’s breakout rookie season looks like a mirage. Megatron is gone.

Russell Wilson has been gimpy. Darrelle Revis has been mediocre. Tony Romo has been invisible.

Too many of the NFL’s headline grabbers aren’t in the news, or aren’t producing the kind of plays and drama football fans crave. With all the consternat­ion about TV ratings for NFL games being down, with everything from the presidenti­al election to the Colin Kaepernick-inspired anthem protests being blamed, maybe pro football is a bit star-crossed because it doesn’t have its stars being, well, stars.

NFL supporters like to say it’s the uniform and the tradition and history of teams that make the game such a slam-dunk attraction. The counter-argument is simply that with such national teams as the Raiders, Giants and Dolphins being non-contenders so often in recent years, why didn’t viewership disappear then? No, it’s about the stars. Arguably the biggest luminary in Roger Goodell’s league is Tom Brady. He sat out the first four weeks thanks to Goodell’s suspension of the Patriots quarterbac­k in the deflated footballs saga. Watching Brady take vengeance on the league office by way of New England’s opponents has been one of the few compelling plots thus far.

Sure, there are others. The way Ezekiel Elliott and Dak Prescott have taken hold in Dallas has been front-page worthy.

“There is no question that Dak and Zeke, there is no question they’re inspiring the rest of the team,” Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said. “This game is a lot about that.”

How about Lorenzo Alexander’s career year in Buffalo after nine seasons as an NFL journeyman?

“I thought he could do a lot of roles for us,” Bills coach Rex Ryan says. “But I had no idea that he was still the same player, but he might be a better player. How it happens, I’m not sure.

“I know one thing, it’s hard work and his dedication and all that. He’s an outstandin­g teammate, too. He deserves all the credit.”

Great story, yes. SportsCent­er material in this age of glitz and memes? Probably not.

It’s unfortunat­e that as the sports world has become a major part of the instant-gratificat­ion, 24 /7/365 social media environmen­t, what is happening with the big names is of primary interest. Almost exclusivel­y.

So heading into a weekend of games, there’s more focus on Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s rehab and LeSean McCoy’s potential absence than on the emergence of Vic Beasley Jr. as a sacks threat or Dennis Pitta’s valiant return to the field.

That way of thinking spreads to the guys with the headsets, too. Mike Zimmer isn’t a star coach the way Ryan or Bill Belichick or Pete Carroll are. Had any of those three done the job Zimmer has without his starting quarterbac­k (Teddy Bridgewate­r) and left tackle (Matt Kalil) and Hall of Famecalibe­r runner (Peterson), he’d be in line for a statue outside the stadium.

Zimmer? Oh yeah, his Vikings are 5-1, the cognoscent­i say, but their chatter is about Chip Kelly being 1-5.

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