Darrell Green Fan
The Voice of Reason
A few reasons:
1) Every game feels simply matters a lot more due to the nature of only having 17 regular seasons games per year + 1 game elmininations in the postseason. It's much less time consuming to follow the NFL than the MLB, NHL, or NBA because of only having one game per week per team rather than 3 or 4 games.
2) American football has the perfect combination of action packed play and having a moment to take in what's going on in between plays. A lot of Europeans who like soccer complain about it stopping too much, but how is watching a sport where a team scoring 3 goals in a match is a big deal any better? Just because they spend more time actively running around the field more? I've never been able to buy that arguement. Same with watching NBA guys play halfcourt ball for 3+ quarters most games, or NHL guys skating the whole time. All sports have their place, but American football is pretty unique among them in terms of playstyle.
3) The NFL is arguably better to watch on TV than it is in person. Even listening to NFL games on the radio can be pretty intense with a good game and the right announcers. Whereas with the NBA, MLB, and NHL, they all seem to be widely considered better to see live in person than on TV. Goes back to the accessibility issue I alluded to in #2. It's much easier to follow a sport that's arguably as good as if not better on TV than it is to follow a league with like 82+ games per season that don't translate to TV as well as football does.
Honestly, for me, what it comes down to is the time restraints I mentioned. At this stage of my life, I simply don't have the time, or motivation to even halfwayy properly keep up with an 82 game NBA/NHL season, let alone a 162 game MLB season. Yeah, almost no one tunes in to even close to all 162 games of an MLB season except for retirees, but the point still stands.
I couldn't imagine taking the time to watch even 50 of those games in a single season, let alone significantly more. As much as I've made honest efforts to follow baseball/basketball/hockey more, I just can't keep up with leagues where half the games feel totally meaningless before the playoffs. Just too much of a time sink to tune in much unless it's towards the end of the season and the teams I'd root are doing well enough to still be in the discussion of winning a title that year.
Then when I do tune in, teams like the Twins and Wild always manage to blow it anyway. I get enough heartache from watching the Vikings do that as it is. Also regarding time sinks, may you have mercy on your soul if you're the type of person who likes watching games besides mostly your own teams. I can't even comprehend how difficult that would be to keep up with in the other sports leagues with 82+ games a year.
This is a pretty good explanation. Maybe it's because they play far fewer games but football is the only sport where I can watch 2 random teams and have an interest. I love baseball too but only if it's my team playing, if not it's just too slow. I used to love the NBA, but now it's a game of one on one in between jacking up 3's. This is why I enjoy seeing teams like Princeton play in the NCAA Tournament, when plays are run and executed well it's a beautiful game. There is nothing more exciting than an overtime playoff game in hockey. But to get to that point you have to watch 2 hours with 4-5 moments that actually matter.
One thing I like about football is every play has a meaning. A sack or pass completion is a tangible gain in real estate. A great move in hockey or soccer means nothing if the ball or puck does not reach the net, even in baseball a 2 out double often goes to waste. In football every yard has value.