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The Madden Curse

Legend:   Players whose pictures grace the covers of Madden NFL video games are doomed by a curse to injury or subsequent obscurity.

Origins:   We often use superstition to help us understand unusual patterns that have no logical explanation, and to help us assert some feeling of regulation over phenomena we cannot control. Not surprisingly, superstition is something we see regularly in the world of sports — how else to explain why a few teams
come up short of winning championships for decades on end, why some players suddenly experience precipitous drop-offs in performance, or why a particularly good player makes the bad play that ends his team's championship hopes? With the application of superstition, all is explainable; we can attribute these kinds of events to factors such as "the Curse of the Bambino," the "sophomore jinx," or a player's unwise decision to wear a jersey bearing the number 13.

In recent years we've seen the rise of several similiar superstitions that tie star athletes' experiencing poor performance and/or serious injuries to their recently having been recognized with singular honors. First was the Sports Illustrated cover jinx, followed later by the Campbell's Chunky Soup curse and the now-legendary "Madden Curse."

It is to that last phenomenon which we now turn our attention. The "Madden Curse" refers to the popular EA Sports series of NFL-based video games, named after former Oakland Raiders head coach and current TV football analyst John Madden. First produced in 1989 as John Madden Football, the video game has been known as Madden NFL since its developers signed a licensing deal with the NFL in 1993, and new versions are released Dorsey Levens annually to incorporate new and improved features and rosters based on current NFL players. For the first eleven years the game's packaging featured the smiling visage of John Madden; starting with the 2001 version and continuing for the last seven years, the box front has presented an action graphic of a selected NFL star. According to a superstition based upon a pattern occurring over the last several years, whichever player signs a deal to appear on the cover of the next version of Madden NFL will suffer a serious injury (or some other stroke of bad luck), resulting in a disappointing performance during the forthcoming NFL season.

The following is a list of the players who have graced the covers of Madden NFL over the years, and the circumstances involving them that have contributed to the development of the "Madden Curse" superstition. To clarify some nomenclature, we'll point out that NFL seasons (including playoffs) span calendar years (from Aug./Sep. to the following Jan./Feb.), and the title of each version of Madden NFL includes the year following its release. Therefore, the term "2001 season" (or simply "2001") would refer to the NFL season spanning 2001-2002, and Madden NFL 2002 would refer to the version of Madden NFL released just prior to the start of the 2001-2002 NFL season. As we explain at length in our article about the Campbell's Chunky Soup curse, such superstitions are in a sense inevitable. Players are generally selected for honors when they're at the pinnacles of their careers — when continued excellence has become the expected norm, and when anything less is considered disappointing. There's nowhere to go from such lofty heights but down: Every player is subject to injury (especially in a contact sport such as football), all athletes eventually experience the decline of their skills with age (if injuries don't prematurely end their careers first), and even top performers are not immune to having off-years or making occasional blunders in crucial game situations. "Bad luck" happens to just about everyone sooner or later, but we only take especial note of it when it seems to fit a pattern.

Last updated:   21 October 2007

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  Sources Sources:
    Ginsburg, David.   "Ray Lewis Out for Season with Hamstring Injury."
    The Washington Post.   7 December 2005.

    Hruby, Patrick.   "Covering the Blues."
    ESPN.com   11 August 2003.

    Lewis, Nick.   "The Madden Curse."
    The Edmonton Journal.   23 August 2006.

    Morris, Chris.   "Will Ray Lewis Be Cursed?"
    CNNMoney.com   7 May 2004.

    Penner, Mike.   "Curses Are Reality to Fantasy Leaguers."
    Los Angeles Times.   27 August 2006.

    Rovell, Darren.   "Cover and Out? McNabb Latest Madden Star to Fall."
    ESPN.com   21 November 2005.

    Solomon, Jerome.   "Only Time Will Tell If Young Can Play."
    Houston Chronicle   18 October 2007.

    NFL.com.   "Alexander Out with Cracked Bone in Foot."
    25 September 2006.