February 11, 2009 5:24 PM
- Text
Schieffer: The Great Value Of Sports
(CBS)
Weekly commentary by CBS Evening News chief Washington correspondent and Face the Nation host Bob Schieffer.
News can be broken into two parts, what people NEED to know and what they WANT to know.
We usually concentrate on the news we believe you need to know. The Super Bowl on the other hand is big news that millions upon millions of Americans WANT to know. Since someone had to do it, we volunteered to help tell the story.
(Now how's that for a high minded excuse for being here?)
For sure, the Super Bowl has become an institution, as much a part of American life as the Fourth of July and Thanksgiving — even a factor in the national economy.
For all of that, for all the hype, whatever happens here doesn't really matter, and to me that is the best part.
We worry, we bet the office pool, we cheer. We analyze and agonize. But in the end, nations will neither rise nor fall because of what happens here. Soldiers will not die. Disease will neither spread nor be cured.
Some years back a weird Dallas Cowboy running back named Duane Thomas put it in some perspective when he said, "If this is the ultimate game, why are they playing it again next year?"
Yet, for a few hours, millions here and even some of our soldiers overseas will put aside what does matter and enjoy something that doesn't. Not many things in American life have the power to do that. And that is a good thing, the great value of sports.
E-mail Face the Nation.
By Bob Schieffer
News can be broken into two parts, what people NEED to know and what they WANT to know.
We usually concentrate on the news we believe you need to know. The Super Bowl on the other hand is big news that millions upon millions of Americans WANT to know. Since someone had to do it, we volunteered to help tell the story.
(Now how's that for a high minded excuse for being here?)
For sure, the Super Bowl has become an institution, as much a part of American life as the Fourth of July and Thanksgiving — even a factor in the national economy.
For all of that, for all the hype, whatever happens here doesn't really matter, and to me that is the best part.
We worry, we bet the office pool, we cheer. We analyze and agonize. But in the end, nations will neither rise nor fall because of what happens here. Soldiers will not die. Disease will neither spread nor be cured.
Some years back a weird Dallas Cowboy running back named Duane Thomas put it in some perspective when he said, "If this is the ultimate game, why are they playing it again next year?"
Yet, for a few hours, millions here and even some of our soldiers overseas will put aside what does matter and enjoy something that doesn't. Not many things in American life have the power to do that. And that is a good thing, the great value of sports.
By Bob Schieffer
Popular Now in CBSNews.com
- The Decline and Fall of the American Empire
- Top Twelve Most Patriotic Songs Ever
- Time For Marijuana Legalization?
- Bush's Final Approval Rating: 22 Percent
- Make Marijuana Legal
- Poll: Majority Reject Evolution
- Poll: Creationism Trumps Evolution
- Must Everyone Speak English?
- The Best Health Care System in the World?
- Here's Why People Don't Buy Global Warming
- How And Where America Eats
- Poll: Majority Believe In Ghosts
- The Trouble With Tall People
- Autoworkers Making $70 An Hour? Not Really
- Why Justices Ginsburg and Breyer should retire now
- America's Eighth Amendment Absurdity
- Figuring Out Free Speech On The Internet
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- In Greece, debt deal gets a mixed reception
- Walmart's profits slip; US business rebounding
- Israel to free Palestinian hunger striker
- Israeli Justice Ministry official: Deal struck to release hunger-striking Palestinian in April
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






