Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Commission­er won’t commit on positions on key issues

- Paul Newberry AP Sports Columnist

ATLANTA >> This much we know after Roger Goodell’s annual State of the NFL gabfest leading up to the Super Bowl.

The league has never been stronger. The commission­er is a fan. And there was a missed call in the NFC championsh­ip game.

But Goodell doesn’t want to use his immense power to improve the NFL by changing officiatin­g rules, getting Colin Kaepernick back into the league, figuring out where the Raiders should play next season or even to make sure stadium food is cheaper. And no, he never considered ordering a replay of the moments after the missed call in the RamsSaints game. Our apologies, Who Dat Nation. It was all so slick, of course, watching Goodell turn Wednesday’s news conference into a display of bobbing and weaving, ducking and parrying — all while making sure not to take a stand on much of anything, certainly not while standing in front of a massive ballroom packed with hundreds of media from around the globe.

He downplayed his role in almost every issue facing the NFL, from Kaepernick to officiatin­g to halftime entertainm­ent, kicking the can to team owners, league committees or Maroon 5.

Officiatin­g was on everyone’s mind, a huge stain on the league after the debacle that occurred in the NFC championsh­ip. But Goodell wouldn’t be lured into giving details on possible solutions, whether it be increased use of replay (the most obvious way to address the problem) or a suggestion that the league add an eighth official.

Instead, we got the smooth-as-silk Goodell offering up an order of non-commitment, covered with a heaping helping of covering all the bases.

“As it relates to what I think my role is, it’s to make sure that the Competitio­n Committee understand­s that this is critical for us to analyze, to evaluate and try to see if there’s a better solution than what we have today,” Goodell said.

We certainly hope there’s a better solution than what we saw a couple of Sundays ago, when the officials didn’t bother to call an egregious pass interferen­ce penalty that would’ve likely sent the Saints to the Super Bowl.

Goodell acknowledg­ed the call was blown, but came up far short of offering aggrieved fans in the Big Easy any satisfacti­on. “We understand the frustratio­n that they feel right now,” the commish said. “We certainly want to address that.”

Then, he proceeded not to address much of anything.

“Whenever officiatin­g is part of any kind of discussion postgame, it’s never a good outcome for us,” Goodell said. “... But we also know our officials are human. We also know that they’re officiatin­g a game that moves very quickly and they have to make snap decisions under difficult circumstan­ces. And they’re not going to get them right every time.”

But when the officials get one so wrong, it’s up to those in charge — starting with the guy at the top — to take a strong, forceful, unequivoca­l stand that restores a bit of confidence. Goodell did none of that.

He wouldn’t commit to force changes. For that matter, he wouldn’t commit the league to making any changes.

“The game is not officiated by robots. It’s not going to be,” Goodell said. “We will look again at instant replay . ... Should replay be expanded? It does not cover judgment calls. This was a judgment call. The other complicati­on is that it was a no-call . .... ”

Just when it sounded like Goodell was taking a position, he quickly put that notion to rest. “They have not voted for that in the past. It doesn’t mean that we won’t,” said Goodell, ducking off the ropes and finding plenty of space in the middle of the ring.

Goodell took the same tack on any other issue of substance. He shrugged off a significan­t dip in the reduction of minority head coaches, not to mention the dearth of minorities who serve as offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­k coaches. “We don’t look at one-year increments,” he said.

Just as troubling, he treated Kaepernick’s continued blackballi­ng (now at two years and counting) as nothing more than a personnel matter, insisting all 32 teams decided, completely independen­t of each other, that a quarterbac­k who led the 49ers to a Super Bowl is no longer qualified to play.

Naturally, it has nothing to do with the national anthem protests that Kaepernick led in a bid to address racial and social injustice, a stand that won’t be a judgment call at all when history is written. Kaepernick was right. Goodell and NFL were wrong. Finally, Goodell found his sweet spot. A child journalist asked him if it was tough to be commission­er and a fan of the game. “What a good question!” Goodell exclaimed.

Actually, there were plenty of good questions.

Just not a lot of answers.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States