NFL: Bob Costas confirms he got fired from the Super Bowl for talking about concussions

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Bob Costas confirms he got fired from the Super Bowl for talking about concussions

Earlier this year—after 40 years of sports broadcasts, Olympics coverage, and one absolutely hellacious case of pink-eye—veteran sports commentator Bob Costas announced that he was stepping down from his post at NBC Sports. Now, Costas is ready to talk publicly about one of the most controversial moments of the latter portion of his career: Getting unofficially fired from the network’s 2018 Super Bowl coverage, specifically for bringing up the concussion crisis that’s been quietly endangering the brains of NFL players for years.

For those not fully plugged in to the office politics of 2018 broadcast sports: Costas was originally supposed to co-host NBC’s coverage of Super Bowl LII, his eighth time helming NBC’s take on The Very Large Game. However, just a few days before the game was set to be played, the network quietly replaced him with fellow anchor Liam McHugh. At the time, Costas played his replacement off as a case of schedules meshing and professional courtesy, but even back then, people speculated that it had a lot more to do with comments he’d made about the “declining” state of modern football the year before. In a conversation at the University Of Maryland, he’d told a crowd of people that he’d never let hiskids play a sport that’s been repeatedly linked to traumatic brain injuries in the people who play it. Or, to put it more bluntly (as he did): “The reality is that this game destroys people’s brains.”

Now, Costas has apparently confirmed: Yeah, he got fired for talking about the NFL’s most obvious, least-discussed secret. ESPN is running an E:60 conversation with Costas tomorrow morning, posting a trailer for it online today, in which he notes that he was told that he “crossed the line,” and that he’d no longer be allowed to host the Super Bowl. A follow-up from ESPN’s Mark Fainaru-Wada made it clear that Costas was referring to the network’s reactions to his brain damage comments.

There’s nothing online right now linking the Super Bowl shitshow to Costas’ overall decision to retire from NBC—dude’s 66, so it’s not like the choice to leave after 40 years with the network was entirely unprecedented—but it’s clear, even a year later, that he’s not happy with how the topic was handled. Meanwhile, it’s just one more clear indication that, while the NFL continues to be happy to pay lip service to the idea of making the game “safer,” it (or the networks who broadcast and profit alongside it) are still willing to bring the hammer down when someone starts talking about the fact that it’s still patently unsafe.
 
NFL controls that shit tight. The narrative this year was crazy. Have any white people sang the national anthem? They only named the black singers. The NFL had their announcers acting like it was the Civil Rights Bowl.

As for the concussions, the NFL can only put off the inevitable for a couple more decades at most.
 
Bob Costas Wants To Have It Both Ways

Dom Cosentino

Today 4:49pm
Filed to: BOB COSTAS
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Photo: Jennifer Stewart (Getty)
Bob Costas seemed to be speaking truth to power in a recent segment on ESPN’s Outside The Lines, detailing a lengthy backstory about power and influence and the NFL’s relationship with its broadcast partners. It was classic Costas: smooth, controlled, authoritative—all the trustworthy qualities that made him one of sports broadcasting’s most famous personalities. There was a veneer of candor to much of what Costas had to say; he was letting us peek behind the curtain, but only to a point. He freely discussed his ambivalence about whether it was wise to have talked to OTL in the first place, and he likewise was frank about how OTL’s report might be received. The only subject Costas never quite reconciled was Bob Costas.

The OTL piece, which was accompanied by a written story from reporter Mark Fainaru-Wada, drills down on why NBC removed Costas from last year’s broadcast of Super Bowl 52, and Costas’s eventual departure from NBC, where he worked from 1979 until last month. In Costas’s telling, there had been a gathering storm because of his repeated willingness to describe football as a danger to players’ brain health—a stance that rankled the NFL and eventually nuked the support his superiors at NBC had for him. In the segment, Costas works diligently to portray himself as a rabble-rouser who tilted at the windmills of NFL hegemony, but his self-characterization soon lurches into self-aggrandizement. “The networks, all of them, dance to the NFL’s tune,” Costas tells Fainaru-Wada. “It’s just kind of the way it goes. Everyone walks on eggshells around the NFL.” Left unsaid is why Costas stayed on for as long as he did as the public face of one of the NFL’s biggest and most lucrative promotional partnerships.



Fans of the NFL and the reporters who cover it (ahem) all have varying degrees of cognitive dissonance about the sport of football. But NBC isn’t some independent entity watching or chronicling the NFL from a passionate perch or a dispassionate distance. It pays billions of dollars to provide a platform that showcases the league. It then sells ads against those broadcasts to make billions of dollars for itself. Costas’s intermittent on-air critiques of the NFL were instantly undone every time he threw it back to Al and Cris for the start of the second half. And it ain’t like Costas is giving back the gobs of money he made helping the NFL sling its product.

Consider this timeline. In December 2015, Costas wanted to discuss the recently released film Concussion during one of his Sunday Night Footballhalftime essays, only to be told he couldn’t after he submitted his words to a pair of NBC Sports executives for advance approval. “We’re in negotiations with the NFL for Thursday Night Football,” was the response. “It was at that point that I realized that this was an untenable situation for me,” Costas tells Fainaru-Wada. “I knew my days there were numbered.”

The final straw didn’t come until November 2017—nearly two years later—when Costas publicly discussed brain trauma and football on three separate occasions during the span of a week. First, NBC issued a comment to the New York Daily News distancing itself from Costas’s remarks, and before long the network chose to remove him from its Super Bowl telecast. “Costas insists that rather than being upset or feeling punished,” Fainaru-Wada writes, “he felt relief.” And why wouldn’t he have felt that way? As Fainaru-Wada points out, Costas had already triggered an option in his contract that made the 2016 season his last, with Super Bowl 52 as his final NFL telecast. He was 65 years old by then. He got to launder his guilt without risking anything beyond that one game.

Costas says he proposed an interview with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who declined. This caused Costas to naively wonder about the NFL’s “obligation” to NBC. Costas is clearly aware that NBC needs the NFL—“Look, the NFL isn’t just the most important sports property, it’s the single-most important property in all of American television. And it isn’t even close,” he tells Fainaru-Wada—but he seems to be oblivious about the NFL not needing NBC at all.

His apparent qualms go even further back: Costas tells Fainaru-Wada he once asked to be taken off NBC’s NFL telecasts, citing “[t]he sheer violence of the game, and then the celebration of that violence, even before CTE became a specific issue ... I just didn’t feel comfortable with that. That felt stupid to me.” This was in 1993! Yet when NBC bought the rights to Sunday Night Football in 2005, Costas agreed to return as host “out of loyalty” to then-NBC Sports chairman Dick Ebersol, “as kind of a good soldier.” This was all it took to make Costas comfortable with feeling what he once described as stupid, apparently.

It’s hard not to be reminded of an anecdote about Costas, shared on Deadspin in 2011 by no less than Robert Lipsyte:

Costas says he is not out to throw bombs (like you bloggers out there) but to keep the mainstream accountable. But how can you do that, I say, well after the fact and with infrequent essays on steroids, concussions, and TD dances? But coming from Costas, he says, those essays and opinion pieces have far more impact than they do coming from the distant outsider voices online. Coming from Costas, I reply, the audience is comforted that no matter how bad the news, all is right in our sweaty sanctuaries.

In his memoir, An Accidental Sportswriter, Lipsyte writes, “No one has ever walked so gracefully the line between journalist and shill as Costas.” Lipsyte would later declare his “respect” for Costas’s “integrity and authenticity—I do believe he is the humane, measured insider/traditionalist he seems to be.” At the same time, Lipsyte expressed “a feeling of poignancy for his thin skin and need to be admired.” Bob Costas let us peek behind the curtain, but he just unwittingly gave us a glimpse of exactly how deep that need goes.
 
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