Close to Home: Sweating the small stuff, like Deflategate

With Super Bowl XLIX upon us, the sports pages (even some science and editorial pages) are passionately afroth with deflategate chatter.|

With Super Bowl XLIX (how many Americans can quickly translate Roman numerals?) upon us, the sports pages (even some science and editorial pages) are passionately afroth with deflategate chatter.

Was the football intentionally underinflated during the first half of the Patriots-?Colts game? Hands are wringing. The world trembles with the possibility that a National Football League team might be cheating.

In 1957, C. Northcote Parkinson, British naval historian and the author of more than 60 books, published the international bestseller “Parkinson’s Law,” a series of trenchant and oft-humorous essays, which made him a name in public administration and management. The eponymous adage explained in the titular essay as Parkinson’s Law is: “Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.” Less well known, but just as pithy and important, is Parkinson’s Law of Triviality.

Now also known as “bikeshedding,” Parkinson’s Law of Triviality states that the more complex an issue, the less time spent on it. He illustrates this with a corporate executive committee meeting that has plans for a nuclear power plant on its agenda. With little discussion (too confusing … trust the experts), the committee speedily and unanimously approves the complex reactor plans but spends a much longer time arguing the far less important but easy-to-understand issues (e.g., should we use galvanized tin for the employees bicycle shed?).

So it is with the NFL. The league is facing several extremely complex issues with wide-ranging implications. Brain damage (Junior Seau and scores of retired players) and domestic violence (Ray Rice and many others) are two that demand deep and consistent coverage. Yet these complex “nuclear” issues have been knocked off the sports pages by the “galvanized tin” of a soft football.

The outcome of serious inquiry into football’s role in brain damage could alter the nature of the game (and the nature of the owners’ wallets). Dealing with the domestic violence incidents is awkward for management and bad for team morale (and maybe owners’ profits). Both create negative publicity.

So can’t we talk about something else? How about flaccid footballs?

Deflategate press is good for the NFL. It creates good guys and bad guys. You get a team to root for or hate. Like professional wrestling, goosing your fans sells tickets. And that’s good for the owners.

And we can watch today’s game and ignore the hard stuff - for a while longer.

Steve Cotler of Healdsburg writes the “Cheesie Mack” series (ages 8-12) published by Random House.

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