Las Vegas Review-Journal

Players separate Hardy, teammate

Source: Suspended Dallas DE called a ‘woman-beater’

- THE SPORTS XCHANGE

Dallas Cowboys defensive end Greg Hardy was involved in a verbal altercatio­n with backup defensive lineman Davon Coleman at the team’s facility and reportedly had to be separated by teammates.

Fox Sports first reported the incident Friday following an onfield argument that took place on the final day of the first week of the Cowboys’ offseason program. ESPN.com later confirmed the report.

According to Fox, the dispute between the defensive linemen arose from Hardy’s questionin­g Coleman’s effort during conditioni­ng drills. The situation escalated when, according to a source, Coleman took a dig at Hardy’s domestic violence issues.

“(Coleman) called him a woman-beater,” the source told Fox.

Coleman’s agent, Michael Loeffler, told ESPN the players didn’t need to be separated.

“There was no physical altercatio­n of any nature whatsoever,” Loeffler said. “No physical contact, touching, nothing. Ba- sically my understand­ing is that Davon and Greg Hardy finished a workout, had a discussion and there was nothing to step in to and nobody did because there was nothing going on except a discussion. ... I think it’s getting a little blown out of proportion.”

The Cowboys are in Phase 1 of the offseason program that focuses on strength and conditioni­ng. Players can’t do any on-field work with their position coaches or coordinato­rs until May 4.

Commission­er Roger Goodell was asked about the altercatio­n at an Associated Press Sports Editors meeting Friday, but he said he was not aware of the incident and would get more informatio­n before commenting.

On Wednesday, Hardy was suspended 10 games for “conduct detrimenta­l to the league.”

Hardy was notified in a letter from Goodell that he is suspended for the team’s first 10 games of the regular season for violating the league’s personal conduct policy. Hardy and the NFL Players Associatio­n plan to appeal the league’s ruling.

Hardy was informed that a two-month NFL investigat­ion following the dismissal of his case in North Carolina state court determined that there was “sufficient credible evidence that Hardy engaged in conduct that violated NFL policies in multiple respects and with aggravatin­g circumstan­ces.”

In July 2014, the former Carolina Panthers defensive end was found guilty of assaulting his former girlfriend, Nicole Holder, and threatenin­g to kill her. Hardy received a 60-day suspended sentence and 18 months’ probation on misdemeano­r charges, and then he appealed the judge’s ruling in favor of a jury trial. The case was dismissed in February when Holder chose not to cooperate with authoritie­s after reportedly receiving a settlement from Hardy.

 ?? DAVID MANNING/ USA TODAY FILE PHOTO ?? New Cowboys defensive end Greg Hardy reportedly was in an altercatio­n with teammate Davon Coleman, who, according to a source, called Hardy a “woman-beater” because of his suspension related to a domestic violence case in July 2014.
DAVID MANNING/ USA TODAY FILE PHOTO New Cowboys defensive end Greg Hardy reportedly was in an altercatio­n with teammate Davon Coleman, who, according to a source, called Hardy a “woman-beater” because of his suspension related to a domestic violence case in July 2014.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States