https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...y-40-million-per-year/?utm_term=.a639d6da43b6
NFL owners have completed an agreement with Commissioner Roger Goodell on a five-year contract extension, according to multiple people familiar with the situation.
The deal runs through 2024 and is expected to pay Goodell as much as approximately $40 million per season, close to 90 percent of which would be tied to incentives.
The agreement is between Goodell and owners on the compensation committee, led by the Atlanta Falcons’ Arthur Blank. The compensation committee informed the other owners via a memo, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Post.
It is not clear whether the deal will run into further opposition from Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who threatened at one point to sue over Goodell’s extension but since has rescinded that threat.
[From November: The NFL is reeling and the Jerry Jones-Roger Goodell rift doesn’t help]
Owners are scheduled to meet Dec. 12-13 in Dallas. Jones sought increased input by owners not on the compensation committee into Goodell’s contract, and a final ratification vote by all owners once the deal was completed.
The league has maintained that there will not be another vote of the owners. The owners voted, 32-0, at their May meeting in Chicago to authorize the compensation committee to negotiate the new deal with Goodell.
Jones served for a period of time as a non-voting member of the compensation committee. But that arrangement ended after he informed other committee members that he’d hired attorney David Boies and was prepared to file a lawsuit opposing Goodell’s extension.
That began a tense standoff between Jones and other owners. There was a flurry of threats, accusations and letters sent back and forth. Jones accused Blank of misleading owners about the negotiations. He contended that such a significant investment in the commissioner was not justified at a time when the league was facing financial hardships.
Others owners, in return, accused Jones of being guilty of conduct detrimental to the league. There was talk of potential penalties that could include a fine, suspension or the loss of a Cowboys’ draft pick or picks. There were reports about the possibility of Jones being forced to sell the Cowboys, a franchise with an estimated value of more than $4 billion. But those reports about Jones being stripped of his franchise were dismissed by people familiar with the league’s inner workings as unrealistic.
Jones subsequently indicated he would not sue, saying he’d been satisfied that other owners would have increased input into the process. The league said there had been no agreement with Jones for the threat of a lawsuit to be dropped in exchange for a final ratification vote by all owners.
Goodell’s extension would keep him in place through the league’s negotiations for its next collective bargaining agreement with the players’ union and its next set of television contracts. Owners locked out the players prior to the last labor deal being struck in 2011. In September, player leaders voted to retain DeMaurice Smith as executive director of the NFL Players Association while barring other candidates from vying for the job during this election cycle.
TV ratings for NFL games have sagged over the past two seasons, and this season the league and Goodell have faced intense criticism by President Trump and some fans about players’ protests during the national anthem. Owners declined to enact a rule when they met in October requiring players to stand for the anthem. They said they instead were focused on discussions with the players about league support of players’ community activism.
Those discussions culminated with an agreement on a social-justice initiative by which the league and owners would contribute about $90 million between the onset of the deal and 2023 to social causes considered important to players, particularly in African-American communities. Both sides have said the agreement does not require players to stand for the anthem. People familiar with the owners’ thinking have said they could act in the offseason, if the protests last this entire season, to change the anthem policy for next season and keep players in the locker rooms until after the anthem is played, which would be similar to the sport’s pre-2009 approach.
NFL owners have completed an agreement with Commissioner Roger Goodell on a five-year contract extension, according to multiple people familiar with the situation.
The deal runs through 2024 and is expected to pay Goodell as much as approximately $40 million per season, close to 90 percent of which would be tied to incentives.
The agreement is between Goodell and owners on the compensation committee, led by the Atlanta Falcons’ Arthur Blank. The compensation committee informed the other owners via a memo, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Post.
It is not clear whether the deal will run into further opposition from Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who threatened at one point to sue over Goodell’s extension but since has rescinded that threat.
[From November: The NFL is reeling and the Jerry Jones-Roger Goodell rift doesn’t help]
Owners are scheduled to meet Dec. 12-13 in Dallas. Jones sought increased input by owners not on the compensation committee into Goodell’s contract, and a final ratification vote by all owners once the deal was completed.
The league has maintained that there will not be another vote of the owners. The owners voted, 32-0, at their May meeting in Chicago to authorize the compensation committee to negotiate the new deal with Goodell.
Jones served for a period of time as a non-voting member of the compensation committee. But that arrangement ended after he informed other committee members that he’d hired attorney David Boies and was prepared to file a lawsuit opposing Goodell’s extension.
That began a tense standoff between Jones and other owners. There was a flurry of threats, accusations and letters sent back and forth. Jones accused Blank of misleading owners about the negotiations. He contended that such a significant investment in the commissioner was not justified at a time when the league was facing financial hardships.
Others owners, in return, accused Jones of being guilty of conduct detrimental to the league. There was talk of potential penalties that could include a fine, suspension or the loss of a Cowboys’ draft pick or picks. There were reports about the possibility of Jones being forced to sell the Cowboys, a franchise with an estimated value of more than $4 billion. But those reports about Jones being stripped of his franchise were dismissed by people familiar with the league’s inner workings as unrealistic.
Jones subsequently indicated he would not sue, saying he’d been satisfied that other owners would have increased input into the process. The league said there had been no agreement with Jones for the threat of a lawsuit to be dropped in exchange for a final ratification vote by all owners.
Goodell’s extension would keep him in place through the league’s negotiations for its next collective bargaining agreement with the players’ union and its next set of television contracts. Owners locked out the players prior to the last labor deal being struck in 2011. In September, player leaders voted to retain DeMaurice Smith as executive director of the NFL Players Association while barring other candidates from vying for the job during this election cycle.
TV ratings for NFL games have sagged over the past two seasons, and this season the league and Goodell have faced intense criticism by President Trump and some fans about players’ protests during the national anthem. Owners declined to enact a rule when they met in October requiring players to stand for the anthem. They said they instead were focused on discussions with the players about league support of players’ community activism.
Those discussions culminated with an agreement on a social-justice initiative by which the league and owners would contribute about $90 million between the onset of the deal and 2023 to social causes considered important to players, particularly in African-American communities. Both sides have said the agreement does not require players to stand for the anthem. People familiar with the owners’ thinking have said they could act in the offseason, if the protests last this entire season, to change the anthem policy for next season and keep players in the locker rooms until after the anthem is played, which would be similar to the sport’s pre-2009 approach.