The NFL has a scheduling issue surrounding its primetime opener once again

Written by Brad Gagnon on .

The NFL has created a cool tradition by having the defending Super Bowl champion host a Thursday night prime-time game to kick off the season on an annual basis. 

Last year, the New York Giants had to move their opening game up one night to Wednesday because Barack Obama was speaking at the Democratic National Convention.

This year, a less significant event is causing problems. The game might not be able to go on Thursday because the Baltimore Orioles are scheduled to host the Chicago White Sox at 7:05 p.m. ET on that very night. The two Baltimore teams don't share a stadium, but they do share parking lots. And while the O's are on the road the night prior, the first night of Rosh Hashanah is preventing the league from making the same move it made last September. Friday night is out of the question from a viewership standpoint, which is why the only remaining option might be to send the Ravens on the road for their opener. 

"Unfortunately, the only option is to take the Ravens on the road," commissioner Roger Goodell said from the owners meetings in Phoenix Monday. "We think that is wrong for the Ravens’ fans. We would not want that to happen. That is why we are trying to reach an accommodation here. We are working on the schedule. We are working on parallel tracks for a couple more weeks. Clearly, we are getting to a point where we have to make that decision."

Goodell said he's spoken to MLB commissioner Bud Selig about making the Orioles-White Sox game a matinee, but that the two sides are still "trying to work out an accommodation" in that regard.

"We have agreed to move the game a little bit later in the evening to try to accommodate the baseball game," he said. 

But those stubborn baseball people might put up a fight. 

"It doesn’t just involve the Orioles. There is another team,” Katy Feeney, MLB’s senior vice president for club relations and scheduling, told the Baltimore Sun. “I think mainly, from a baseball standpoint, to make that change is extremely difficult.”

Extremely difficult? Both teams play the night prior but let's not pretend this would be some sort of tremendous sacrifice. If doubleheaders happen, so can this. 

Frankly, though, I can understand why Major League Baseball wouldn't be jumping to help its biggest competitor. Time and again the NFL has overshadowed MLB events with big-time matchups that have been conveniently placed on the same night. Baseball won't likely budge unless it has to.

[Baltimore Sun]

9 comments
Giantsfan1982
Giantsfan1982

Just start the season on Sunday instead of a Thursday. Its the way it should be.

CUbsfan
CUbsfan

 @Giantsfan1982

GantsFan1982 the only problem with that is that the game wouldn't be able to be Nationally Televised on NBC and NBC would have 1 less Nationally Televised NFL game than they were contracted to show

too!!! 

roboadam
roboadam

Why don't they just do it at FedEx field? That would be practically home field for the Ravens.

YosefMordechaiColeman
YosefMordechaiColeman

what i dont understand is if they have a problem scheduling a game for the first day of Rosh Hashanah but the second day there is no problem with it 

KevinWatterson
KevinWatterson

I agree, but baseball is also in the unfortunate position of not being able to antagonize the NFL too much. If it does, Goodell can just say to beans with them and squash them like a bug. 

Dave McHugh
Dave McHugh

Baltimore's parking can not handle two games and probably over 100,000 fans. They both share roughly 2/3s of the 8 or lots around the stadiums... pretty much impossible to pull off. The teams have also shifted games around in the last, usually during Ravens preseason, to accommodate these issues.

Matt Pelc
Matt Pelc

MLB should stand its ground. After all, Goodell is the one who bucked the longstanding gentlemen's agreement and began scheduling Sunday night games at the start of the World Series. Pay backs are a bitch.

Rich Goranson
Rich Goranson

Baltimore's parking issue does not mean a scheduling issue for the NFL or for MLB. It is perfectly reasonable to have games being played in both stadiums at the same time if proper provisions for traffic and crowd control are made. This is a fabricated "crisis."

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