Dan Snyder Wasn’t on the N.F.L. Owners’ Meeting Agenda. Here’s What Was.

Dan Snyder Wasn’t on the N.F.L. Owners’ Meeting Agenda. Here’s What Was.

[ad_1]

The fate of the Washington Commanders owner Daniel Snyder dominated the reports of the N.F.L. owners’ meeting in Manhattan on Tuesday, after the Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay broke ranks with his peers and told reporters there was merit to forcing Snyder to sell his team.

Commissioner Roger Goodell admonished the owners not to speculate on Snyder, whose franchise has been the focus of two league investigations and inquiries by a congressional committee and two attorneys general, until the league’s investigation is complete. Goodell said there was no timeline for its conclusion.

In a statement, a Commanders representative said Snyder had no intention of selling the team.

Despite the attention paid to Snyder, he was not formally discussed at the league’s meeting, which he did not attend.

Here are a few of the items that were discussed among the league’s proprietors.

Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson is on track to return on time from his 11-game suspension for accusations of sexual misconduct by more than two dozen women, Goodell said at a news conference after the meeting.

As part of his negotiated disciplinary settlement with the league, Watson agreed to participate in an evaluation by behavioral experts as well as a treatment program. The settlement terms required Watson to “faithfully commit” to the program. A failure to participate could result in further disciplinary action or a delay in reinstatement.

Goodell said Watson had followed all the terms of the agreement through Tuesday.

Watson’s ban from the Browns’ team facility ended last week, and he can begin practicing with the team Nov. 14. He will be eligible to play in a game Dec. 4, when the Browns visit his former team, the Houston Texans.

Last week, a new lawsuit was filed against Watson in Harris County, Texas, by a woman who said he pressured her into performing oral sex during a massage appointment in December 2020. The details of the suit, including the date and location, match the account of a woman who filed a police report against Watson in April 2021. Watson did not face criminal charges in that case or in any of the 10 considered by two grand juries in Texas in March.

Watson cannot be subjected to further league discipline for accusations of misconduct that are the same or substantially similar to what he has been penalized for and which occurred before his discipline was imposed in August, according to the settlement terms. He could be penalized if a more recent incident surfaces, or if any accusation involved the use or threat of physical force or the use of a weapon, or if it results in a criminal charge.

Nearly a year after the N.F.L. agreed to pay $790 million to the city and county of St. Louis to settle a four-year dispute over whether the league broke its own relocation guidelines to pave the way for the Rams to move to the Los Angeles area in 2016, the owners agreed to split the cost.

As recently as last year, several owners assumed that E. Stanley Kroenke, the owner of the Rams, would pay the settlement, according to owners who spoke on the condition of anonymity. After all, they voted to allow him to move to the Los Angeles area, which more than quadrupled the value of his team to a reported $6.2 billion in 2021.


What we consider before using anonymous sources. Do the sources know the information? What’s their motivation for telling us? Have they proved reliable in the past? Can we corroborate the information? Even with these questions satisfied, The Times uses anonymous sources as a last resort. The reporter and at least one editor know the identity of the source.

Last year, Kroenke told the owners he should be responsible only for the legal fees involved in relocating the team, since the N.F.L. as a whole benefited from the move to Inglewood, Calif., where he spent $5 billion to build a stadium, which hosted last season’s Super Bowl.

Goodell, with the help of several owners, brokered a compromise, which the owners approved unanimously Tuesday. According to two people familiar with the agreement who were not authorized to speak publicly about it, every owner other than Kroenke will pay the league about $7 million, which together will make up roughly one-quarter of the settlement. The owners will not have to write a check because the league withheld roughly that amount from their shared revenue disbursements last year.

Kroenke will pay the league the remainder, about $573 million and the interest on the settlement that accrued in the span since the league paid St. Louis last year. Kroenke is also responsible for the $22 million in attorney fees that the league spent fighting the case. The owners granted Kroenke a debt waiver so he could borrow money to pay back the league.

“It was resolved as partners, and that’s what the league does,” Goodell said afterward. “And I think it was incredibly positive.”

The N.F.L. declined to discuss the specifics of the compromise. The Rams did not immediately return a request for comment.

The league said it would play a game on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, for the first time, in 2023, after it reached an agreement with Amazon to stream the game.

The one-year deal will expand professional football’s hold on the Thanksgiving holiday, increasing the schedule to four games in about 24 hours from Thursday to Friday. It will also help Amazon raise its profile on one of its slower sales days of the year, a commercial bonanza more associated with brick-and-mortar retail than e-commerce.

The N.F.L. said it would unveil the opponents in the Black Friday game when it released its schedule next year.

The added game was part of Amazon’s agreement with the league to stream Thursday night games, said Jay Marine, Amazon Prime Video’s global head of sports. Amazon and the league hope to hold the game annually, he said, but will first assess the viewership and the interest of Amazon’s customers in the game.

“We think this will be a fantastic new tradition,” Marine said. “It is a perfect fit.”

Amazon paid more than $50 million for the rights to show the game, according to two people with knowledge of the agreement.

The N.F.L. made two changes to hiring protocols for head coaches and general managers in the wake of the lawsuit filed in February by a former Miami Dolphins coach, Brian Flores, who accused the league and its 32 teams of discriminating against him and other Black coaches in their hiring practices.

Key team decision makers, including owners, will be required to participate in inclusive hiring training before beginning a search for a new head coach or general manager. The league is also recommending that the decision makers work with a third-party consultant who has expertise in inclusive hiring practices.

[ad_2]

Source link

POPULAR NEWS