Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Civil rights attorney seeking NFLPA job

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Pro Football Hall of Famers Kellen Winslow and Harry Carson are supporting Cyrus Mehri’s candidacy for executive director of the players’ union.

The civil rights attorney who cowrote the league’s Rooney Rule announced Tuesday that he intends to challenge DeMaurice Smith for the top job at the NFL Players Associatio­n. On Wednesday, Winslow, Carson and John Wooten backed Mehri, though they’re no longer voting members of the union.

Wooten, Carson and Winslow were instrument­al in the creation of the Fritz Pollard Alliance, an affinity group of NFL minority coaches, scouts and front office personnel that advocates for policy changes in the NFL hiring practices.

“The NFLPA is a group of united workers, and many of the issues that they face are just like those that other workers in this country face: issues of health, safety, dignity, and career longevity,” they said in a statement.

“The players need an executive director who is an expert in labour and employment law and who will stand up to the NFL. Nobody is better prepared to do this than Cyrus.

“For his entire working life, Cyrus has been fighting corporate

America on behalf of workers, and he has a track record of fearlessne­ss and success. He has battled some of the country’s largest and most powerful corporatio­ns, such as Texaco, the Coca-Cola Company, and Ford Motor Company, and he has done wonders for their employees. As executive director of the NFLPA, Cyrus will do the same thing for NFL players: past, present, and future.”

Smith has led the union since 2009 and directed it through the 2011 lockout and negotiatio­ns that led to a 10-year collective bargaining agreement.

“I was a team captain for 10 of my 13 seasons with the Giants,” Carson said. “I know what leadership is, and I know a leader when I see one. Cyrus is a leader. ”

Mehri said on HBO’s Real Sports that he felt compelled to become a candidate for the position after examining the current CBA. Mehri says the players “went backwards economical­ly in a massive way,” and Smith gave Commission­er Roger Goodell “a blank check” when it comes to player discipline.

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