Albany Times Union

The NFL’S expanded reach doesn’t go nearly far enough

- NORMAN CHAD Couch Slouch ▶ Norman Chad is a syndicated columnist.

In a clandestin­e meeting at a Doubletree by Hilton conference room in Grand Rapids, Mich., in late March 1987, Pete Rozelle, Paul Tagliabue and Roger Goodell secretly hatched a plan for worldwide, around-the-clock NFL expansion, according to multiple sources at or near the gathering who are unauthoriz­ed to speak publicly about the undertakin­g because they might not even know what they’re talking about.

And, from all indication­s, this covert NFL manifesto is now in its final stages.

Here is what the NFL is considerin­g for as early as the 2021 season, according to a report from cbssports.com’s Jason La Canfora:

■ Add a 17th game to the regular season and a second bye week.

■ Additional game for each team would be played out-of-market.

■ Out-of-market games every week internatio­nally or in U.S. cities without an NFL team.

■ Add a wild-card playoff game in each conference.

■ Move the Super Bowl to end of February.

Impressive­ly, the NFL is considerin­g doing all of this in the face of growing science about neurologic­al damage to its players and growing resistance from parents to allow their kids to play football.

Then again, the NFL still retains a pervasive hold on much of the sporting public. Heck, the NFL could’ve sold Directv Sunday ticket packages to passengers on the Titanic.

Although the NFL has not added a team since the Houston Texans became its 32nd franchise in 2002, the league has continued to expand in other ways, including scheduling games as many as four days a week and playing multiple games annually in England and Mexico.

Frankly, I believe the NFL should stop its tippy-toe crawl toward global domination and rather stomp its feet en route to replicatin­g the early-20thcentur­y British Empire.

My NFL plan is bolder, brasher and more in line with Jerry Jones’ wildest, non-jason Garrett hopes:

■ A 32-game regular-season schedule.

■ Expand to 48 teams.

■ Back legislatio­n to literally change the

calendar to better oblige NFL scheduling needs.

Let’s start with this 17th game the league is pondering. One more game? What’s that? Reminds me of the U.S. Postal Service upping postage two or three cents at a time. JUST GO FOR IT; double the length of the season, for goodness sakes. More replays! More comebacks! More records! More injuries!

I mean, if they had already done this, Matthew Stafford could’ve made it to 100,000 passing yards by now without ever winning a playoff game.

By growing to 48 franchises, the NFL can put teams in London, Mexico City, Moscow, Hong Kong, Montreal, Pyongyang, San Antonio, Anchorage, San Diego, Kenosha, Wis., Tunica, Miss., Trinidad and Tobago, Paris (France), Paris (Texas) and Monowi, Neb.

I’d also contemplat­e taking the Jaguars out of Jacksonvil­le, because nobody ever goes to Jacksonvil­le unless they are already in Jacksonvil­le.

To accommodat­e this bloated enterprise — and allow the NFL to better command the nation’s TV programmin­g — the key would be to replace the seven-day, 52-week year with a six-day, 60-week year.*

(* If you give Donald Trump a team while he is still in the White House — Eric can run it — he will back this calendar change with or without congressio­nal approval.)

Just get rid of Tuesdays — Tuesdays are for losers — and then the NFL could broadcast games on Sundays, Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays; this would leave Wednesdays for ESPN to run an all-day NFL studio bonanza blowout in which 24 of its talking heads debate Stephen A. Smith one hour at a time on various league topics.

Sure, some snowflakes likely will whine about player safety concerns over a nearly year-round season. Not a problem. Through a unique fan promotion that will ensure sellouts every week, if the last available player on the hometeam roster gets hurt, one eligible season ticket holder’s name will be pulled from a hat and play the rest of the game!

And with in-game betting apps on the horizon, this means you’ll be able to watch, gamble on and even play in an NFL game all for the price of a ticket. Wow.

Ask The Slouch

Q: Can you explain to a 78-year-old man the rationale of a player celebratin­g a touchdown by impersonat­ing a dog peeing? (Joseph Dreyer; La Porte, Tex.)

A: What, you’d prefer he impersonat­e a dog pooping?

Q: Do NFL players really pin their ears back? (Mark Cohen; Gibsonia, Pa.)

A: Not since Odell Beckham Jr. was fined by the NFL for nonstandar­d pins.

Q: Using your rapier-like wit, could you discuss the Washington R*dsk*ns? ( William Case; Sterling, Va.)

A: They stink.

Q: Why is revenge a dish best served cold? (Bob Lipman; Spokane, Wash.)

A: Search me — I microwave everything.

Q: If Russia is banned from the 2020 Summer Olympics, do you think President Trump will pardon them? (John Oetting; Columbia, Md.)

A: Pay the man, Shirley.

You, too, can enter the $1.25 Ask The Slouch Cash Giveaway. Just email asktheslou­ch@aol.com and, if your question is used, you win $1.25 in cash!

 ?? Brynn Anderson / Associated Press ?? NFL commission­er Roger Goodell has a plan to add to the league’s influence, but the Couch Slouch’s plan is bolder.
Brynn Anderson / Associated Press NFL commission­er Roger Goodell has a plan to add to the league’s influence, but the Couch Slouch’s plan is bolder.
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