USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Leading OFF

Fans booking trips for NFL now may be in for rude fall surprise

- Jarrett Bell Columnist USA TODAY More coverage of NFL’s schedule release, Pages 14-18

In yet another indication of the mighty NFL’s all-too-powerful ability to market its product to the masses, this past week was quite a stretch for the dripdrop release of the regular-season schedule.

First came the internatio­nal games. Then the first Black Friday offering was announced. That was followed by the reveal of the opening Monday night matchup. OK, here’s the seasonopen­ing kickoff game. New Year’s Eve? Christmas? Plan your holiday feasts accordingl­y. And yeah, a midseason rematch of the NFC title game is coming in a Sunday afternoon window on Fox.

Talk about a tease or two. All this came out before the faucet was turned on to unveil the “full schedule” in prime time.

In one sense, you’ve got to give it to the league for playing the drama as another opportunit­y to stay in the minds of its consumers during the offseason – two weeks since the draft, a little more than two months since the combine and three months after the Super Bowl.

Just know that some of the most significant slots with this schedule are TBD.

Brace yourself, NFL fans (and players and coaches, too), for the most fluid NFL schedule in history (that, uh, wasn’t thrown for a loop due to the COVID-19 pandemic).

When NFL owners meet in Minnesota on May 22-23, it’s expected that a proposal will be back on the agenda to allow for flexible scheduling for the “Thursday Night Football” games on Amazon in Weeks 1417. The measure, needing 24 votes to pass, came up two votes short of being adopted during league meetings in Phoenix in

March, with two teams (Carolina and Denver) abstaining.

Although New York Giants co-owner John Mara vehemently expressed his opposition during and after the meeting, calling the proposal “abusive” to fans who buy tickets, the proposal has the support of Commission­er Roger Goodell and momentum fueled by several powerful owners.

You know what that means. Money talks. TV (including streaming broadcasts, with Amazon paying the NFL $1 billion a year) moves the needle.

Never mind the players, and especially the ones from the better teams who will be tapped to switch games from Sundays to prime time. Apologies to the fans who might arrange to travel from out of town. At their last meeting, owners voted to allow late-season “Monday Night

Football” games to be flexed for the first time. And they voted to allow teams to be flexed twice into such short weeks for Thursday night windows, which before could happen just once in a season. The next move for the option of the Thursday flex seems all but imminent.

As one coach told USA TODAY Sports last week, “It’s coming, as sure an 18th game is coming down the line.”

Don’t look for any pushback from the collective body of players. In the extension of the labor pact with players that was struck in 2020, owners secured the right to unilateral­ly flex more of the late-season games.

DeMaurice Smith, the executive director of the NFL Players Associatio­n, sounded a lot like Mara in expressing concern for the fans. Smith also said that although there isn’t compelling

data that suggests a difference with the injury rate for Thursday night games, he’s mindful of the extra dimensions for playing on short weeks and potentiall­y in multiple cases.

“It’s not just the rate of injury that we’re talking about,” Smith told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s things like load (management) and emotional stress and changing someone’s schedule.”

At the conclusion of the meetings in Phoenix, Goodell reiterated his often-cited position about the Thursday injury rates being relatively unchanged from Sunday games and pushed back on Mara’s contention that fans are getting a bum deal.

And Goodell pointed out that since the NFL began flexing late-season Sunday night games in 2006, the league has averaged roughly 1 1⁄2 flexed games a year – the inference being that a massive overhaul of the late-season Thursday window isn’t the idea.

“So, it’s a very important thing for us to balance with that I would call season ticket holders and the in-stadium markets,” Goodell said, “but we have millions of fans who also watch on television, so reaching them is a balance that you always strike and making sure we do it right.”

The NFL reportedly averaged 9.6 million viewers for the first year of its streaming deal with Amazon in 2022, which was down 46% from the previous season’s games on Fox and the NFL Network.

A drop-off seemed inevitable, given the new platform for the marquee game. But the NFL, with an Amazon deal that extends through 2033, is also motivated to help bolster the viewership by providing appealing matchups later in the season. The flex games would be determined with no less than 15 days’ notice.

Mara’s words typically carry much weight among owners. Yet in addition to the concern that he expressed for fans – “To flex a game back to Thursday night, for me, is just abusive, and I am adamantly opposed to it,” he said in March – Mara apparently also wasn’t thrilled that the proposal landed on the agenda without being thoroughly vetted with the competitio­n committee of which he is a member.

In the weeks between meetings, presumably there is time to vet the competitio­n committee, if not to get an endorsemen­t. Then again, it’s probably a significant sign that the competitio­n committee apparently wasn’t involved in crafting the proposal to flex on Thursday nights.

In other words, it will take a miracle to sway the room in the opposite direction.

In the meantime, the schedule is set … except the parts that are TBD.

 ?? JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Patrick Mahomes plays against the Packers last season at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. The Chiefs visit Green Bay for a Dec. 3 Sunday night game in 2023.
JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/USA TODAY SPORTS Patrick Mahomes plays against the Packers last season at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium. The Chiefs visit Green Bay for a Dec. 3 Sunday night game in 2023.
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