After
an exhaustive 32-man bracket of fan voting fervor, EA finally has its
Madden NFL 12 cover man: Browns running back Peyton Hillis. If your
first question regarding this is, "Who?" congratulations: you're not
from Cleveland.
Hillis shocked the world last season by being a player on the Browns
actually worth talking about. His 1,100 yard, 11 TD season sprung out of
a 5-11 record for the team. As one of the few lone bright spots on the
squad, Hillis quietly amassed a fervent following among the Browns fan
base and, over the course of EA Sports and ESPN's voting bracket,
actually managed to garner more votes than NFL stars like Falcons QB
Matt Ryan, Ravens running back Ray Rice, and Super Bowl XLV MVP Aaron
Rodgers.
His final competition was Eagles QB Michael Vick, who became the NFL's
Comeback Player of the Year last season after a huge season for
Philadelphia that led to a fairly typical Eagles post-season--one of
abject disappointment. Vick would have seemed the logical, popular
choice, though his chances may have been hurt by the fact that he
apparently used to be way into killing dogs for fun and profit.
Hillis now need only avoid the Madden Curse, that long-running superstition that being awarded the coveted cover spot
of a Madden NFL game is the endorsement deal equivalent of the Sword of
Damocles. Gracing the cover has often led to, at best, a sub-par season
for the featured athlete, and at worst, some kind of terrible,
career-altering injury.
Though it's hardly iron-clad proof of any Madden-related hoodoo,
stars such as Daunte Culpepper, Eddie George, Marshall Faulk, Donovan
McNabb, Ray Lewis and Shaun Alexander have all suffered some manner of
misfortune immediately following a cover appearance. Vick himself was
once a cover victim as well. After taking the cover spot for Madden NFL 2004, Vick missed 12 games of the season after suffering a broken leg...
not to mention all the years of financial turmoil and legal torment
that followed after his status as an aficionado of competitive dog
murder came to public light.
But hey, Hillis is probably going to be fine, and we here at Giant Bomb would like to offer our congratulations to Peyton and the people of Cleveland, who haven't had it easy in recent years, what with LeBron James and the economy and the suffocating weight of nonstop depression and all that. We also extend our
condolences to EA Sports, who now have to figure out how to market a
video game with a Cleveland Browns player on the cover. We're sure they'll figure something out.
Sign-in to post a reply.