In “Offensive Play” written by Malcolm Gladwell, the idea of “How different are dogfighting and football?” is presented. Throughtout the article Gladwell bounces back and fourth on topics including football, dogfighting, and science. The focus of football is that of a offensive lineman, which includes a story from a retired N.F.L. player by the name of Kyle Turley. The part about dogfighting depicts Michael Vick, the animal rights posterboy, and provides an in-depth view of not only the dogs during a fight, but the thoughts and actions of the owners. And last but certainly not least is the science aspect where neuropathologist Ann McKee along with former college football player and professional wrestler Chris Nowinski team up to give us key examples of former N.F.L. players suffering from dementia. Buckle your seat belts and put the children to bed, your about to embark on a wild ride never thought imaginable.
As the story starts we are introduced to Kyle Turley, an ex-football player who served nine years in the National Football League playing as a offensive lineman under multiple teams. After passing out at a Nashville bar one night with his wife, Turley goes on to tell us about multiple times he has been invloved in big hits on the football field. Occasionally going cross-eyed, getting blurry vision, and in one case being knocked unconscious. Scary part was when he had passed out at the bar in Nashville, he compares it to the exact same feeling of being knocked unconscious during a football game!
Michael Vick is then introduced for pleading guilty to his involvement in dogfighting and an extremely graffic description of a dogfight takes place thanks to “The Social Milieu of Dogmen and Dofights” and article written by sociologists Rhonda Evans and Craig Forsyth. Two dogs are placed in a pit and subject to fight one another, often to the death. “In a dogfight, as soon as one of the dogs ‘turns’-makes a submissive gesture with its head- the two animals are seperated and taken back to their corners.” Only to be released again to finish the job, which in this case continues for over an hour. After the fight, the loser has two broken legs and blood gushing from her throat. This is when possibly the most humane action of the night takes place. The loser is killed with a couple gunshots, wrapped and carried to the owners vehicle. Why do people get involved in this line of work? “For the entertainment of an audience and the chance of a payday.” Sounds like you could use that very same quote to explain why football players play football.
The article once again switches gears into the medical side of this argument, and Ann McKee is introduced. McKee is a scientist specializing in the field of neuropathology, which is basically the study of disease in nervous system tissue. McKee begins studying patients with Alzheimer’s disease, finding out that there are typically two trademarks of the disease. But after taking a close look at a seventy-two-year-old mans brain, she then realized this man had a different condition. A condition called chronic traumatic encephalotpathy (C.T.E.), and this condition is the result of injury. McKee then joins with Nowinski to further investigate the link between dementia and football. Nowinski tells Mckee that he will help her find more brains of ex-athletes to strengthen her research. In one case a linebacker who played for sixteen years showed damage done equivilent to using his head as a battering ram, another where a teenager showed to have more damage done than a fifty-year-old.
The story then bounces back-and-forth like a game of ping pong tying in facts from concussions, stories of dogfights, and revealing issues of what it’s like to be a professional football player along with issues facing retired football players. All three parties clearly love what they do; scientists on trying to understand brain disease and inform players of future risks, possibly even prevent suicide in some cases. Dogfighters as they place bets, entertaining an audience and making money, pitting their animal against another in the most primitive form of competition. Then football players giving everything they have day in-and-out, seeking the love and respect of millions of people and at the same time making millions of dollars. No matter how hard you try to prevent football from being non-violent; “There is nothing else to be done, not so long as fans stand and cheer. We are in love with football players, with their courage and grit, and nothing else-neither considerations of science nor those of morality-can compete with the destructive power of that love.” The same can be said of dogfighting , so to give a general answer to Gladwells opening question: Dogfighting and Football are different in many ways, but this article proves that they are similar in many more.
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Much better, Alex! (That last line of first para. made me laugh, though--maybe a bit much?) The one thing I'd mention is about how you use quotes. What you have in many places here is what's called a dropped-in quote, where the quote is just plopped into the middle of your text. What you want instead is to use some sort of introductory phrase to link what you;re saying to the quotation, to explain why it's included and where it comes from. We didn't get a chance to talk abou this much in class, so I'll post some info about it on blog when i catch up a little more...
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