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FOOTBALL ISSUES Thank you for Austin Murphy
's story about Barry Sanders
, Detroit
's superb running back (Sept. 10). Our youth need someone to admire and emulate, and Sanders
provides such a model.
Murphy
says Sanders
is not sanctimonious and quotes Lion coach Wayne Fontes
as saying, "Barry's not the type of guy who scores a TD and kneels down in front of everyone in the world." The common spectacle of today's athletes kneeling in the end zone, crossing themselves in the batter's box or huddling in prayer on the sidelines is ridiculous and repugnant. To whom are they praying? What god, worthy of the name and presumably concerned about the deprivation and misery of half of the world's population, could give a damn when an over-paid American jock makes a touchdown or wins a tennis match? ONE-PLATOON FOOTBALL Incidentally, Crisler
later spoke out against the two-platoon system and, as chairman of the NCAA
football rules committee in 1953, supported a successful effort to abolish it. Amen to your call for one-platoon football. Eliminating player specialization and requiring versatility would be better for the game all around. While we're at it, let's go one step further and fix another flaw bred by unlimited substitution: The extra-point kick should be attempted by the player who scored the touchdown. This would introduce a new level of strategy. If you're on the one-yard line, do you give the ball to a powerful fullback who's a poor kicker, or do you look for a way to let a better kicker score? Placekicking would become as crucial a fundamental for a back as free throw shooting is for a power forward. For all other kicks (except, of course, the opening kickoff), require the kicker to have been on the field for his team's most recent offensive play. Getting the kicking game into the hands (or feet) of regular players would bring the foot back into football. Your story listed seven good reasons to return to the one-platoon system, but I believe Looney
left out an important one: It could train young men to be leaders, to think on their own under game conditions. Another reason: The fans would love it.
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