Kuwait Times

DeMaurice Smith re-elected as head of NFL players’ union

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DeMaurice Smith has been re-elected as executive director of the players’ union in a special committee vote. Under guidelines passed since his last election as NFL Players Associatio­n head in 2015, a 14-player selection committee could bypass a full membership election.

That committee, made up of the 11 members of the NFLPA executive committee plus the three longest-serving player representa­tives, reviews the sitting executive director. That group can then call for an election to keep the incumbent in office, and the vote must be unanimous.

The 14-0 vote took place Tuesday night. “After a comprehens­ive and profession­al process in line with our constituti­on,” NFLPA President Eric Winston said in a statement, “the NFLPA selection committee has unanimousl­y selected DeMaurice Smith to continue in the role of executive director. Congratula­tions to De and we know there is more work to be done.”

Added Smith: “The union centered on player leadership. I am proud of their commitment, humbled by their trust in me and honored to serve.” But attorney Cyrus Mehri, who had launched a campaign to oppose Smith in a general election in March, called the re-election “a non-democratic process” and vowed to continue working toward having a full election of the membership in March.

“This was a very closed process,” Mehri said. “This is less about me than the 2,100 players and 32 player reps who have been disenfranc­hised; 26 clubs didn’t even have a representa­tive on the executive committee. “I talked to a number of player reps who were not on the executive committee and the feedback was they want a competitio­n. Overwhelmi­ngly, they said that I am a serious candidate.

“No one I talked to remembers having a big constituti­onal discussion about this (change), so it’s kind of a mystery behind what happened with the amending of the constituti­on. “I also feel the union has lost a lot because they don’t have a leader with legitimacy because this was a nondemocra­tic process.”

A union spokesman declined to respond to Mehri’s comments. Smith was elected to the post in 2009 and led the players through the league’s lockout of them in 2011. That summer, the sides reached agreement on a new 10-year CBA that included, among other things, reductions in practice and meeting times and in how much contact was allowed in those practices.

The deal also allowed NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell to keep his powers in overseeing fines and suspension­s in a variety of areas, including personal conduct. Smith and the union have claimed nearly ever since that Goodell has abused those powers, and they currently are fighting the league in court over Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott’s sixgame suspension under the personal conduct policy.

But league spokesman Joe Lockhart yesterday congratula­ted Smith on his reelection while avoiding getting into the politics of it. “As far as we are concerned, we congratula­te him on his re-election,” Lockhart said. “We

think we had productive negotiatio­ns with him in 2011 with the last collective bargaining agreement and believe that agreement has worked strongly for both sides, ownership and players. “Most important has been the joint effort to grow the game of football with things like what you saw Sunday night in Atlanta with a new stadium ... that grows the game and works for both parties.—AP

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