As reported by Liberty Voice: The NFL is nothing if not tops in adopting new technology.
At least, they consider themselves to be near the top. Yet the idea of
using GPS as a means to monitor a football player’s performance and
health is only starting to make its way around the league. At the
moment, a number of individual teams are eyeing the new technology and,
sooner rather than later, the league itself might get involved. Revenue
being the alpha and omega of the NFL’s existence, the league likely has
its own ulterior motives for seeing a complete adoption of GPS.
The reason? In a nutshell, better performance means healthier players, and healthier players play longer. And players that play longer might give the league what it wants: an 18-game season.
The reason? In a nutshell, better performance means healthier players, and healthier players play longer. And players that play longer might give the league what it wants: an 18-game season.
The idea of monitoring athletes with GPS, or a Global
Positioning System, has been around for a few years and over 400 sports
leagues around the world are already using the technology to some degree
or another. Most of the Australian Rugby League, half of the English
Premier League, and a number of NBA teams have jumped on board.
Australian-based Catapult Sports, the world’s largest maker of the
devices, sees American sports as the next great frontier. The NHL has
starting looking into the technology, the NCAA national champion Florida
State Seminoles have been experimenting with it and, as of now, 12 NFL
teams have officially started incorporating it into their practices.
A football player wearing a GPS device is like a race car
feeding data back to its crew. If the car is running low on gas, its
tires starting to wear out, or the driver’s instincts are starting to
falter, the crew knows in real-time, just as an NFL coach can watch for
signs a player needs to slow down or be taken out of a practice.
Performance factors like the force of hits a player suffers, fatigue
over a period of time, strength and conditioning results, the amount of
ground a player covers and on and on can suddenly be quantified. And
within all this data is the means to possibly prevent, or at least
delay, player injuries.
In a league as lousy with injuries as the NFL, anything
that might keep its players healthy is worth its weight in gold. And
since Roger Goodell has never been one to hide his intention to put as
much football on television as possible, there are both sincere and
ulterior motives to use technologies like GPS to keep everybody around.
Depending on one’s level of cynicism, it is possible to imagine the
league sincerely cares about the health of its players. But it is also
undeniable the league profits from players staying on the field as long
as they can during a season.
Despite the league’s fantastic popularity, the problem of
what to do with injured players is desperately important for any
long-term survival plans. The looming lawsuits by former players are as
serious as the NFL’s ever had to face, and there is no guarantee it will
come out in their favor. There is also been a significant drop in youth
league participation- a 9.5 percent drop between 2010 and 2012- meaning
parents are very concerned about the concussion. The league claims new
advances in helmet design will protect from concussions, but it remains
to be seen if the kids will be allowed to come back.
GPS will become an integral part of the effort to minimize
injuries and keep the league as lawsuit free as possible. Fortunately,
teams using GPS have already seen results. The Florida State program
says certain injuries have been reduced by almost 90 percent and over in
Australia, the major Aussie-rules football leagues claim an almost 50
percent decrease. There is no reason to think the NFL can’t see
comparable results in upcoming years.
The question Roger Goodell is undoubtedly asking himself is
what to do with all these future healthy players. Adding two more teams
to the playoffs is not even a hypothetical; by 2015 or 2016, it will be
a reality. What comes after is the big question. The league has
recently denied it, but their ulterior motive, their fondest wish if
players can play longer, is to expand the season to 18 games. The NFL’s
Player Association has repeatedly fought it, but if the league agrees to
eliminate a few pre-season games and dangle enough money, the
Association will likely give in. Bloated or not, the league will get its
18 games.
So GPS seems to be a promising technology, not just for
professionals but athletes in general. For NFL players, though, it could
end up being a both a blessing and a curse. Healthy enough to keep
playing but worn down by so much more time on the field, they might end
up thinking nothing has really changed.
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