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Jul
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This time, Vs the Chargers Sunday: http://www.buffalobills.com/news/news.jsp?news_id=4450
hootmon said:That is really a bad sign. I think the worst thing for a sports franchise is fan apathy.
When the game isn't seen by the fans, they can't rave, complain, etc. after the game with their pals and co-workers.
Julius May said:The last 2 regular season home games might also be blacked out in Buffalo. As of earlier today: About 7,000 tickets remain for Miami on Dec. 17 and more than 10,000 for Tennessee on Dec. 24.
dhett said:Julius May said:The last 2 regular season home games might also be blacked out in Buffalo. As of earlier today: About 7,000 tickets remain for Miami on Dec. 17 and more than 10,000 for Tennessee on Dec. 24.
Tennessee? Tennessee who? Bank on a blackout. Both teams are already for all intents and purposes out of playoff contention and in spite of the NFL (No Forward Lateral) game in the playoffs some years back, there has never been a real rivalry with Tennessee.
dhett said:Julius May said:The last 2 regular season home games might also be blacked out in Buffalo. As of earlier today: About 7,000 tickets remain for Miami on Dec. 17 and more than 10,000 for Tennessee on Dec. 24.
I'd be surprised if the Miami game were blacked out - that's a huge rivalry game, especially if Buffalo can play spoiler to Miami.
Tennessee? Tennessee who? Bank on a blackout. Both teams are already for all intents and purposes out of playoff contention and in spite of the NFL (No Forward Lateral) game in the playoffs some years back, there has never been a real rivalry with Tennessee.
aarontabr said:Since the Tennessee game will probably be blacked out, maybe the Bills fans can throw stones at Jeff Fisher.
Brian Donegan said:this is really sad. Didn't Buffalo have a very long stretch of sellouts until just recently?
Also doesn't the NFL traditionally throw out the blackout rules on Christmas Eve?
The NFL is the most popular of the professional sports leagues but its not going to be for long, especially with stupid blackout rules, rules for home football games, and these NFL Network games.
I don't think the NFL ever threw out TV blackout rules on any day. Occasionally, if it's really close to a sellout, they'll grant a 24-hr extension, but if the game isn't sold out by then, no dice. The NFL has a valid argument: how do you expect to sell something, if you're just going to give it away anyway? Until the 1970s, all home games were blacked out, regardless of whether or not they sold out. The networks had to drag the NFL, kicking and screaming, to the current agreement, although IMO, it's been a benefit to the NFL.Brian Donegan said:this is really sad. Didn't Buffalo have a very long stretch of sellouts until just recently?
Also doesn't the NFL traditionally throw out the blackout rules on Christmas Eve?
The NFL is the most popular of the professional sports leagues but its not going to be for long, especially with stupid blackout rules, rules for home football games, and these NFL Network games.
I'd forgotten that the game was blacked out. But I remember watching part of the game, but I missed the comeback part due to an appointment I'd had that evening. I must have picked it up from WSTM in Syracuse then. Back then, Syracuse could show Buffalo Bills home games; the NFL has changed that ruling since - it must have been shortly afterward, because I left the Rochester area in 1993, and they had already changed the rules by then.EnbyCee said:Actually, the combination of large stadium/weak local economy/small market (though they do draw fans from neighboring markets including Toronto) has made blackouts an un-rare phenomenon for the Bills. Even when they were the colossus of the AFC in the early 90's, they had some _playoff_ games blacked out, the most famous being the "comeback" game against Houston in 1992.
What I find alienating about the NFL are the cable-only games, be it the NFL Network or ESPN, and the rules that say that when a team is at home, the home market cannot get three games if the team doesn't sell out, or if the team does sell out, but the doubleheader is on the other network. Phoenix and the Bay Area were the only markets that didn't get the Dallas/Indy game.EnbyCee said:I would agree that the NFL is alienating fans with the stupid blackout rules and the NFL Network fiasco, but since other major pro sports are following similar asinine policies (NASCAR about the only exception) I wouldn't count on the NFL being displaced as the most popular pro sport in America anytime soon.
dhett said:I don't think the NFL ever threw out TV blackout rules on any day.
Back in the early days of television, a rival league to the NFL, the AAFC, experimented with televising games (the NFL has always relied on rival leagues for original thought - they've never been innovators themselves). The experiment included televising home games, with unsatisfactory results. Fans didn't show up for games when they could get them on local TV.
KeithE4 said:They lifted the blackout for the week they returned after 9/11, and for all Saints games last year. Those are the only ones I can think of.
KeithE4 said:The AAFC played from 1946-49. I'd be very surprised if there were enough TV viewers outside of NYC to make a difference at the gate in those days - even in bars, where most TVs were in those days.
KeithE4 said:They lifted the blackout for the week they returned after 9/11, and for all Saints games last year. Those are the only ones I can think of.
dhett said:KeithE4 said:They lifted the blackout for the week they returned after 9/11, and for all Saints games last year. Those are the only ones I can think of.
I didn't know the 9/16/01 games - I was driving from Phoenix to Reno that day, having just landed a temporary job there. Were the Cards at home?
Foe Paw said:dhett said:I didn't know the 9/16/01 games - I was driving from Phoenix to Reno that day, having just landed a temporary job there. Were the Cards at home?
There were no games on 9.16.01. At all. Those games were postponed to the week after the originally scheduled Week 17, which would bump the Super Bowl into February for the first time (it would return in February for good a couple years later).