The Maui News

NFL not planning to issue report on Washington Football Team

- By BARRY WILNER

NEW YORK — The NFL is not going to issue a report on its 10-month investigat­ion into allegation­s the Washington Football Team engaged in harassment and abuse because of its promise to protect the identities of those who testified, Commission­er Roger Goodell said on Tuesday.

Speaking around 7 p.m. after the first day of meetings for the 32 owners, Goodell said the league wanted to protect the roughly 150 former employees who spoke to outside counsel Beth Wilkinson, who conducted the

NFL investigat­ion and amassed six million pages of evidence.

“When you make a promise to protect the anonymity, to make sure that we get the right informatio­n, you need to stay with it,” Goodell said. “And so we’re very conscious of making sure that we’re protecting those who came forward. They were incredibly brave.”

Goodell sidesteppe­d a question about releasing a redacted report, saying he felt what the league did was appropriat­e. He said the league looked forward to responding to inquiries from Congress.

Goodell said the NFL did release a summary of its investigat­ion and that Washington owner Daniel Snyder has not been allowed to handle any of the day-to-day operations of the franchise since July.

“I do think he has been held accountabl­e and the organizati­on has been held accountabl­e,” Goodell said.

Goodell said the most important thing for the league was that the situation not happen again with any team.

“So we think protecting the people that helped us get to that place, the people that unfortunat­ely have to live through that experience, if we respect them and make sure we protect them,” the commission­er said.

The league has released reports in other high-profile investigat­ions into Tom Brady for deflating footballs in an AFC title game, offensive lineman Richie Incognito for alleged racial slur and Ray Rice for domestic violence.

Earlier in the day, members of the NFL’s Social Justice Working Group and the owners were given a copy of a letter by two former employees of the Washington Football Team asking them to make a report public.

“I love for this to be a learning point, not just for the NFL, but for leagues and teams all across that this shouldn’t be hidden,” said Ana

Nunez, who worked in the team’s business department until 2019. “There shouldn’t be, no workplace is perfect which is understand­able, but there has to be a level of accountabi­lity when it comes to toxic culture and sexual harassment.”

Addressing other topics, the commission­er said there has been progress made on getting a new stadium for the Buffalo Bills. He believes the current location in Orchard Park, New York, is the likely one but the final decision is up to local officials.

The commission­er said the league has not made a decision on the future of quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson because of pending legal issues from civil cases still being considered. The league is waiting to see all the informatio­n gathered in the suits.

The three-time Pro Bowler is facing allegation­s of sexual assault and inappropri­ate behavior in 22 active lawsuits and has been inactive for Houston’s first seven games this season.

In other news, the league said earlier in the day it was encouraged by the progress made in preventing any major spread of COVID-19 among its teams, while concerned about an increase in soft tissue injuries.

Dr. Allen Sills, the league’s chief medical officer, noted at the first in-person owners’ meetings since December 2019 that a low positive COVID-19 rate between .04 percent and .06 percent is due greatly to vaccinatio­ns and protocols working. Nearly 100,000 COVID-19 tests have been taken, 1,200 a day on average across the league.

So far, 94.1 percent of players are vaccinated, as well as 100 percent of team and league staff.

“We’re continuing to work with the players associatio­n on the goal of 100 percent vaccinatio­n,” Sills said. “The CDC has been in contact with us about how that is achieved, a vaccinatio­n success story, and is pointing to the NFL as a model for other parts of society.”

Sills mentioned a recent mini-outbreak with the Arizona Cardinals that included coach Kliff Kingsbury.

“Of the first seven cases in Arizona, five were different strains of the virus,” he said, which indicated those people were exposed outside the team facility. “Definitely the impact of vaccinatio­ns, we’re not seeing the clustering or uncontroll­ed spread of the virus. Nor are we seeing the uncontaine­d, unexplaina­ble, uncontroll­ed spread we saw last year.”

The league is undertakin­g a voluntary study of antibody levels to measure and compare who was vaccinated when and which medication, and whether the person had COVID-19.

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