Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tagliabue overturns penalties

Ex-commission­er throws out players’ suspension­s, criticizes team’s actions

- By BRETT MARTEL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW ORLEANS — Finding fault with nearly everyone tied to the New Orleans Saints’ bounty case, from the coaches to Roger Goodell, former NFL commission­er Paul Tagliabue tossed out the suspension­s of four players Tuesday and condemned the team for obstructin­g the investigat­ion.

In a surprising rejection of his successor’s overreachi­ng punishment­s, Tagliabue wrote that he would “vacate all discipline to be imposed upon” two current Saints, linebacker Jonathan Vilma and defensive end Will Smith, and two players no longer with the club, Browns linebacker Scott Fujita and free-agent defensive end Anthony Hargrove.

Tagliabue essentiall­y absolved Fujita but agreed with Goodell’s finding that the other three players “engaged in conduct detrimenta­l to the integrity of, and public confidence in, the game of profession­al football.”

It was a ruling that allowed both sides to claim victory more than nine months after the league first made “Saints bounties” a household phrase: The NFL pointed to the determinat­ion that Goodell’s facts were right; the NFL Players Associatio­n issued a statement noting that Tagliabue said “previously issued discipline was inappropri­ate.”

Vilma, suspended by Goodell for the entire current season, and Smith, suspended four games, have been playing for the Saints while their appeals were pending. Fujita is on injured reserve; Hargrove is not with a team.

Tagliabue, appointed by Goodell to oversee a second round of player appeals, criticized the Saints as an organizati­on that fostered bad behavior and tried to impede the investigat­ion into what the NFL said was a performanc­e pool designed to knock targeted opponents out of games from 2009 to 2011, with thousands of dollars in payouts.

A “culture” that promoted tough talk and cash incentives for hits to injure opponents — one key example was Vilma’s offer of $10,000 to any teammate who knocked Brett Favre out of the NFC Championsh­ip Game at the end of the 2009 season — existed in New Orleans, according to Tagliabue, who also wrote that “Saints’ coaches and managers led a deliberate, unpreceden­ted and effective effort to obstruct the NFL’s investigat­ion.”

The former commission­er did not entirely exonerate the players, however.

He said Vilma and Smith participat­ed in a performanc­e pool that rewarded key plays — including hard tackles — while Hargrove, following coaches’ orders, helped to cover up the program when interviewe­d by NFL investigat­ors in 2010.

“My affirmatio­n of Commission­er Goodell’s findings could certainly justify the issuance of fines,” the ruling said. “However, this entire case has been contaminat­ed by the coaches and others in the Saints’ organizati­on.”

Tagliabue said he decided that it was in the best interest of all parties involved to eliminate player punishment because of the enduring acrimony it has caused between the league and the NFLPA. He added that he hoped doing so would allow the NFL and union to move forward collaborat­ively to the more important matters of enhancing player safety.

“To be clear: This case should not be considered a precedent for whether similar behavior in the future merits player suspension­s or fines,” his ruling said.

Tagliabue oversaw the second round of player appeals to the league in connection with the cash-for-hits program run by former defensive coordinato­r Gregg Williams from 2009 to 2011. The players initially opposed his appointmen­t.

Goodell had given Vilma a full-season suspension, while he gave Smith, Fujita and Hargrove shorter suspension­s.

Tagliabue cleared Fujita of conduct detrimenta­l to the league.

The former commission­er found Goodell’s actions “historical­ly disproport­ionate” to past punishment to players for similar behavior, which generally had been reserved to fines, not suspension­s. He also stated that it was difficult to determine whether the pledges players made were genuine, or simply a motivation­al ploy, particular­ly because Saints defenders never demonstrat­ed a pattern of dirty play on the field.

“The relationsh­ip of the discipline for the off-field ‘talk’ and actual on-field conduct must be carefully calibrated and reasonably apportione­d. This is a standard grounded in common sense and fairness,” Tagliabue wrote in his 22-page opinion. “If one were to punish certain offfield talk in locker rooms, meeting rooms, hotel rooms or elsewhere without applying a rigorous standard that separated real threats or ‘bounties’ from rhetoric and exaggerati­on, it would open a field of inquiry that would lead nowhere.”

Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees commented on Twitter: “Congratula­tions to our players for having the suspension­s vacated. Unfortunat­ely, there are some things that can never be taken back.”

The Saints opened the season 0-4 and now are 5-8 and virtually out of the playoffs after appearing in the postseason the three previous seasons, including the franchise’s only Super Bowl title to conclude the 2009 season.

Shortly before the regular season, the initial suspension­s were thrown out by an appeals panel created by the NFL’s collective bargaining agreement. Goodell then reissued them, with some changes, and now those have been dismissed.

Now, with the player suspension­s overturned, the end could be near for a nearly 10-month dispute over how the NFL handled an investigat­ion that covered three seasons and gathered about 50,000 pages of documents.

The players have challenged the NFL’s handling of the process in federal court, but U.S. District Judge Ginger Berrigan had been waiting for the latest round of appeals to play out before deciding whether to get involved.

 ??  ?? Jonathan Vilma
Jonathan Vilma
 ?? CLIFF OWEN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Former NFL commission­er Paul Tagliabue, shown Nov. 30 arriving at an attorney’s office in Washington for a hearing on the bounty system of the New Orleans Saints, overturned the suspension­s of four players handed down by current commission­er Roger...
CLIFF OWEN/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Former NFL commission­er Paul Tagliabue, shown Nov. 30 arriving at an attorney’s office in Washington for a hearing on the bounty system of the New Orleans Saints, overturned the suspension­s of four players handed down by current commission­er Roger...

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