J
Joseph_Gallant
Guest
I'd actually like to see the new NFL network-TV deals with CBS and Fox be amended so CBS can show one all-NFC game each year.
As you know, CBS has AFC games, and inter-conference teams where the AFC team is the visitor; likewise, Fox has NFC games and inter-conference games wheree the NFC team is the visitor.
Why??
Because both teams that host Thanksgiving games (the Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys) are both in the NFC.
Thanks to the NFL's TV deal, one team has to host an AFC team each year, and each of these two teams hosts an AFC club every other year.
This year, the "interconference" game on Thanksigiving is actually a very good one: Dallas hosts Denver.
Here in New England, where many high-school football teams finish their regular-seasons on Thanksgiving, their Turkey Day opponent is a "rival", and in some cases (i.e. Needham vs. Wellesley in Massachusetts), these rivals have met for over a hundred years. And the final regular-season games for most college football teams (most played the weekend before Thanksgiving, some played this coming weekend [November 25th-26th], others played December 3rd) are usually against arch-rivals, again, some going back more than a century.
What do they have to do with the NFL?? Simple. Detroit should host Green Bay every year on Thanksgiving, and Dallas should host Washington every year on Thanksgiving. You would then get two traditional rivalry games on Turkey Day which should be exciting, regardless of the standings of the teams.
But to do that, you would have to amend the NFL TV contracts in order for CBS to do exactly one all-NFC game during the season, so CBS and Fox can each continue to carry a Thanksgiving Day game. As has been the case in recent years, CBS and Fox would continue to rotate the games so that each network gets the "early" game in Detroit every other year and each network gets the "late" game in Dallas every other year.
As you know, CBS has AFC games, and inter-conference teams where the AFC team is the visitor; likewise, Fox has NFC games and inter-conference games wheree the NFC team is the visitor.
Why??
Because both teams that host Thanksgiving games (the Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys) are both in the NFC.
Thanks to the NFL's TV deal, one team has to host an AFC team each year, and each of these two teams hosts an AFC club every other year.
This year, the "interconference" game on Thanksigiving is actually a very good one: Dallas hosts Denver.
Here in New England, where many high-school football teams finish their regular-seasons on Thanksgiving, their Turkey Day opponent is a "rival", and in some cases (i.e. Needham vs. Wellesley in Massachusetts), these rivals have met for over a hundred years. And the final regular-season games for most college football teams (most played the weekend before Thanksgiving, some played this coming weekend [November 25th-26th], others played December 3rd) are usually against arch-rivals, again, some going back more than a century.
What do they have to do with the NFL?? Simple. Detroit should host Green Bay every year on Thanksgiving, and Dallas should host Washington every year on Thanksgiving. You would then get two traditional rivalry games on Turkey Day which should be exciting, regardless of the standings of the teams.
But to do that, you would have to amend the NFL TV contracts in order for CBS to do exactly one all-NFC game during the season, so CBS and Fox can each continue to carry a Thanksgiving Day game. As has been the case in recent years, CBS and Fox would continue to rotate the games so that each network gets the "early" game in Detroit every other year and each network gets the "late" game in Dallas every other year.