I’m told
that the state motto of Alabama is “Thank God for Mississippi.” By that gauge
the Arizona Cardinals must have emitted a collective groan when the notorious
Daniel Snyder sold the Washington Commanders, nee Redskins. That left the Cards
as the clear choice for worst organization in the National Football League and,
maybe, in all American pro sports.
That’s
saying a lot, you say? Well, the Cardinals are that bad. For instance, what
other team’s lineage includes Al Capone?
More
about Capone later, because the Cards’ “now” is plenty bad enough. Their
won-lost record last season was 4 and 13, which wasn’t the league’s worst but
it was close, and extended a losing tradition that dates to the team’s
founding. The club was among the 14 original members of what in 1920 was called
the American Professional Football Association, along with the Akron Indians,
Muncie Flyers and Chicago Bears. The loop changed its name to the National
Football League two years later.
In their 103 years of existence in Chicago
(1920-59), St. Louis (1960-87) and Arizona (1988-present) the Cards have won
just two NFL titles—in 1925 and 1947—and the first of those still is contested
by folks in Pottstown, Pennsylvania (current population about 23,000), who
believe their late and lamented Maroons were cheated by scheduling
manipulations. The Cards’ all-time record of 581-790-41 includes the NFL lead
for losses. Their winning percentage of .426 ranks third-lowest among the 32
current teams, ahead of only the Jacksonville Jaguars and Tampa Bay Buccaneers,
relative newcomers both.
It’s a
foregone conclusion that the season that begins next month will worsen those
marks. Since the end of last season the team has had its best offensive
player—wide receiver Deandre Hopkins—in effect quit, its best two defensive
linemen-- J.J. Watts and Zach Allen—leave via retirement and free agency,
respectively, and its defensive leader, safety Budda Baker, ask to be traded
before reneging.
Quarterback Kyler Murray, the recipient of a
five-year, $250 million contract in 2021, is a sourpuss whose work ethic has
been questioned. He’s a smallish guy who likes to carry the ball, meaning he’s
injury prone. He missed the last six games of 2022 with a hurt knee and it’s
anybody’s guess when he’ll be combat-ready this year.
The Cards start the season with a
new head coach but the former one hasn’t exactly gone away. Kliff Kingsbury
(four-season AZ record 28-37-1) was fired only a year after he was given a
six-year contract extension at $5.5 million per, and the Cards have to keep
paying him until he finds a new job. He recently was seen enjoying the beaches
in Thailand.
Players thinking of joining the
team might heed a recent survey by the NFL Players Association that ranked it
last in the league in five of eight “quality of employment” categories,
including food service, weight room, locker room, training facilities and
treatment of families. Its overall rank among the 32 teams was last, by a lot.
And upstairs
in the front office, all is not well. The team has a new general manager after
the old one left for still-undisclosed health reasons after serving a
suspension for extreme DUI. The team was named in ex-Miami Dolphins coach Brian
Flores’ racism lawsuit against the league, for firing black head coach Steve
Wilks after just a season on the job (2018) so it could hire Kingsbury. It’s also being taken to arbitration by fired former
vice president Terry McDonough, who charges President Michael Bidwill with a
Snyder-like list of beastly executive behaviors aimed at himself and other team
employees. Bidwill denies all.
The Cardinals are one of five NFL teams that
are, essentially, family businesses, headed for decades by nepots (the others
are the Bears, New York Giants, Pittsburgh Steelers and Cincinnati Bengals). The
founding father was Charley Bidwill, who bought the team in 1933 for a reported
$50,000, including $5,000 in cash and $45,000 in assumed debts.
A lawyer and businessman, the basis of
Bidwill’s fortune was Sportsman’s Park, a Cicero, Illinois, horse track that
closed in 2002. In Illinois and elsewhere racing is a political business,
dependent on state legislatures for operating dates. Bidwill was splendidly placed
for that, being the son of a Chicago alderman and the brother of a state
senator. Reputedly and reportedly, his partner at Sportsman’s was Capone.
At the gangster’s death in 1947 Bidwill bought the track outright from Capone’s
lawyer, Edwin O’Hare.
When Bidwill died later that same
year control of the team, and the track, passed to his widow, Violet. When she
died in 1962 they went to the couple’s adopted sons Bill and Charles Jr., the
latter nicknamed “Stormy” for his bad temper. The two didn’t get along and in
1971 they split, Bill taking the Cardinals and Stormy the track. Bill in 1988 took
the team to the Phoenix area. His son, Michael, runs it now.
The Arizona move didn’t improve
team fortunes-- it’s had but seven winning seasons in its 35 there. The sole
high spot came in 2008 when it made its only franchise trip to the Super Bowl
despite a 9-7 regular season won-lost record. The Cards’ original Arizona home
was Arizona State U’s Sun Devil Stadium¸ from where it annually trailed the NFL
in attendance. A new stadium, opened in 2006, cured that, but nothing else.
If a vote were taken, Arizonans
would remove the Bidwills by a landslide margin. Tsk, tsk, in the NFL an owner
needn’t succeed to prosper—Snyder, who bought the Skins for $800 million in
1999, got $6 billion-plus when he sold, and the Cards must be worth at least
that. Not a bad return on Charley’s $50,000, huh?
1 comment:
Great article! It seems that Arizona's major sports teams have had more than one hapless owner. 🥸
Post a Comment