If not, tough, ’cause it’s time for our first NBC panel: “Sunday Night Football.”

This year brings Keith Olbermann to NBC’s football team, which seems almost designed to spark controversy. Maybe not Dennis-Miller-sized controversy, but, still, controversy nonetheless. Olbermann himself, however, thinks people might just be getting excited over nothing. “The deal is if I say something negative about Reggie Bush, I have to come back and say something negative about Clinton Portis,” he joked. “Other than that, there will be no scripting of this whatsoever. Obviously, you people have asked about this. I think controversy applies to sports. I don’t think it’s going to keep people outside of that. But it’s not going to be unfamiliar to people who have seen me doing sports before.”

* John Madden isn’t thrilled about the off-field antics by NFL players that get all the press, but he does, at least, think the League is doing a halfway decent job of trying to keep things better under control. “I think Roger Goodell is doing a great job on that,” acknowledges Madden. “And, you know, it’s a small percentage, and I’ve talked to the commissioner about this because that bothers me too. In fact, we were just talking earlier about…remember that USA Today picture on the front page that had all the guys that had been arrested? Boy, that hit right in the gut. I thought, you know, that’s not what the NFL is all about. That’s not what pro football is all about. That maybe one percent. And I think that we have to do something to get the other 99 percent out there, and I’m not saying to shove anything under the rug. I mean, take care of ’em, get ’em out, weed ’em out, do whatever you have to. But by God, it’s only one percent, and I think the commissioner agrees with that.”

* Collinsworth’s take on the matter: “Is it part of our job to continue to expose people, to hit on the ‘Pacman’ Joneses of this league? Yes. Are we going to do that? You’re absolutely right. But I really appreciate, and I’ve always appreciated, John’s trying to give a fair and balanced look at the league, you know. I mean John Madden, over the years, has made characters out of people, the Nate Newtons of the world and the guys that have exposed the fun side and what great personalities we have in this league, because you do have a mixture and a melting pot of people from all backgrounds, from all neighborhoods, from all ethnic origins that makes this league so unique.”




