I can see the most logical reasoning behind restricting NFL athletes to Tweetlessness during matches and for a 90-minute window before and after games (i.e. distractions, play-by-play disclosure). But after reading several articles I still can't figure out the main reason for doing this.
My Top Three Theories:
- Betting: Someone injured and Tweets about it before an injury report? Might sway some bets in Vegas. Gotta draw the line between fan communication and the disclosure of bet-able information.
- Distractions: Although I'm fascinated by what is going through Randy Moss's head before high-stepping into the endzone for a touchdown, other people may find it excessive and distracting.
- Case-By-Case: There have been several issues where someone has been fined over a tweet. Antonio Cromartie from the Chargers complained about Dolphin's stadium food and was punished with a $2,500 fine. By making one rule that bans tweets altogether, it eliminates the need for individual cases, like Cromartie food-slagging.
- Why is football the exception? Why not other sports like baseball and basketball?
- Why the 90 minute window? Is 90 minutes the official social media buffer time limit?
Quick Quiz: Which NFL team has the most active Twitter users?
1 comment:
They banned it from tennis, too!
Post a Comment