Let Steve Young's Brilliant Monday Night Football Idea Come True

Steve Young recently told KNBR's Tom Tolbert that he still wasn't interested in replacing new Raiders coach Jon Gruden in the Monday Night Football analyst's chair – "still," as in he's been approached before and declined, for the only legitimate dodge left on the books -- family reasons.
 
"I cannot take a job where you disappear for four days a week for five months," Young said, later adding, "If I could do it from my backyard, sure, I'd do it."
 
And therein lies an idea – a brilliant idea, if I do steal and say so myself.
 
Let Young do the games from his backyard. Put a camera back there and let him work from a lounge chair beside what I imagine is a pool. He should have a beer and snacks at hand, and his kids should be allowed to run in front of him and make noise like they would normally, because that's how most of us watch the games. Maybe he can bring the neighbors over for a little ‘cue, as long as they don't F-bomb through his pregame chat with Sean McDonough.
 
After all, these are not grand secrets he will be imparting. He is not going to be able to articulate the secrets of the bubble screen or the two-deep zone any more cleverly than any other analyst – he will just sound more agreeable and less cartoonish doing it. And if the payment for that sense of informality is him in a Tommy Bahama shirt, cargo shorts, flip-flops and a frothy IPA, well, what's the harm.
 
I mean, it's not like he would be torpedoing ratings momentum. This has been another year of diminishing viewership for the NFL, which continues to struggle with the "F" in its acronym – football. Catches aren't catches, fumbles aren't fumbles, holds aren't holds, first down measurements need office supplies, and nobody can explain why the overseer on the Planet Replay is no better at getting calls right than the guys on the ground.
 
So why not Young lounging in his backyard? Or his garage? Or the hardware store? Or the local tavern? If McDonough needs company in the booth, there is a vast wildlife preserve of ex-players roaming the hills and flats just waiting to share insipid tales of jet sweeps and momentum shifts while Young sits working the business end of a pina colada and providing the big picture the sport is so weak at providing. Frankly, I'm stupefied that it hasn't been done already.
 
This has been A Tramp's View Inside The Television Garbage Fire, and I will happily accept the standard consultants fee when this is universally adapted. 

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