John Madden passed up his chance to stop the NFL’s decay

Tired Aaron Boone bullpen tactic dooms Yankees yet again

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The Land of Woulda-Coulda-Shoulda lies in a vast, barren wasteland — the desolate site of the Crypts of Lost Opportunities.

John Madden passed on Dec. 28. Long celebrated as the best of TV analysts for his “Booms!” his appearances in beer ads, travel on buses and his Thanksgiving Day feasts, I understood his popularity. To a point.

If only he could have applied his presence to the good and welfare of football. He didn’t.

Thus, to me, he was first in a continuing series of disappointments among those who would have, could have and should have made a difference.

In 1979, when Madden was first heard on CBS, NFL games began to degenerate into self-promotional, me-first, sport-be-damned spectacles. Soon, Madden had the forum and clout to offend the offenders. But he passed on that opportunity, whistling past the decay, unwilling, like many eyewitnesses, to get involved.

Would the steady presence of an Antonio Brown, Adam “Pacman” Jones and dozens of other well-established creeps — fresh from American colleges, no less — have been indulged had Madden made it even occasionally plain that their acts are childish, selfish, immodest, unwelcome and often counterproductive? We’ll never know.

Madden actually chose to applaud some perps.

In a close game, after relentlessly selfish (thus expendable) superstar Randy Moss drew a 15-yard penalty from the sideline for spraying a water bottle on a side judge, Rather than ask aloud why Moss wasn’t ejected, Madden laughed, as if he enjoyed and approved Moss’s act.

NBC Sports commentators John Madden and Al Michaels
John Madden had the clout to quiet the noise of NFL showboats — and chose not to.
NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Late in a game his team was winning, Deion Sanders intercepted a pass, then needlessly, mindlessly tried to lateral it. Madden logically should have knocked Sanders’ senselessness.

Instead, he claimed that this play proved Sanders to be “the most entertaining man in football.”

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