Ridgway Record

NFL suspends Dolphins owner for tampering with Brady, Payton

- By Rob Maaddi AP Pro Football Writer

The NFL has suspended Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross and fined him $1.5 million for tampering with Tom

Brady and Sean Payton following a six-month investigat­ion stemming from Brian Flores' racial discrimina­tion lawsuit against the league.

The league's investigat­ion found the Dolphins

did not intentiona­lly lose games during the 2019 season but the team had impermissi­ble communicat­ion with Brady and his and Payton's agent, Don Yee. The league announced the findings of the investigat­ion on Tuesday.

The Dolphins will forfeit a first-round selection in the 2023 NFL draft and a third-round selection in the 2024 draft. Ross is suspended through Oct. 17.

"The investigat­ors found tampering violations of unpreceden­ted scope and severity," NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell said in a statement. "I know of no prior instance of a team violating the prohibitio­n on tampering with both a head coach and star player, to the potential detriment of multiple other clubs, over a period of several years. Similarly, I know of no prior instance in which ownership was so directly involved in the violations."

The investigat­ion concluded the Dolphins violated the league's anti-tampering policy on three separate occasions. The Dolphins had impermissi­ble communicat­ions with Brady as early as August 2019 through the 2020 postseason, while he was under contract to the New England Patriots.

Dolphins vice chairman/limited partner Bruce Beal conducted "these numerous and detailed discussion­s" and kept Ross and other team executives informed of his conversati­ons with Brady.

The Dolphins again had impermissi­ble communicat­ions with both Brady and his agent, Yee, no later than early December 2021 and after the season, while he was under contract to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Those discussion­s focused on Brady becoming a limited partner in the Dolphins and possibly serving as a football executive, although at times they also included the possibilit­y he would play for the Dolphins. The league says Ross and Beal participat­ed in these discussion­s.

Brady briefly retired in February before the seven-time Super Bowl champion chose to return for another season with the Buccaneers.

The third tampering violation involved Payton. In January, the Dolphins had impermissi­ble communicat­ions with

Yee about having Payton serve as Miami's head coach. The Dolphins did not seek consent from New Orleans to have these discussion­s, which occurred before Payton announced his decision to retire from the Saints. Miami requested permission to speak to Payton for the first time after that announceme­nt but New Orleans declined to grant it.

Ross' suspension ends the same day Deshaun Watson is eligible to return from his six-game suspension. A disciplina­ry officer handed out Watson's punishment on Monday after the Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k was accused by two dozen women in Texas of sexual misconduct during massage treatments. The NFL is mulling whether to appeal that decision.

Ross may not be present at the team's facility and may not represent the club at any team or NFL event during his suspension. He also may not attend any league meeting before the annual meeting in 2023, and he is removed from all league committees indefinite­ly.

Beal was fined $500,000 and may not attend any league meeting for the remainder of the year.

Regarding Flores' allegation­s the Dolphins wanted him to "tank" games to secure the top draft pick, investigat­ors said the team didn't intentiona­lly lose and neither Ross nor anyone from the team instructed Flores to lose on purpose.

However, investigat­ors found Ross expressed several times during the season his belief that draft position should take priority over won-loss record. Flores considered the comments a suggestion that he lose games and expressed his concerns in writing to senior club executives. Ross no longer made any such comments to Flores.

Investigat­ors said there are differing recollecti­ons about the wording, timing, and context of Flores' claim of a $100,000-a-game offer from the club to tank, but it "was not intended or taken to be a serious offer, nor was the subject pursued in any respect" by Ross or anyone else at the club.

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