Las Vegas Review-Journal

Saints oppose fan lawsuit for missed call in playoffs

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Though it was badly burned by the “Nola no-call,” New Orleans joined the NFL in opposing a fan’s lawsuit seeking damages over the missed penalty that helped the Los Angeles Rams beat the Saints in January’s NFC title game.

The lawsuit by attorney and selfprocla­imed fan Anthony Lemon resulted in a state judge’s recent order that NFL commission­er Roger Goodell and three game officials submit to questions.

The league appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court on Wednesday, and attorneys for the Saints filed an accompanyi­ng brief supporting the league.

The Saints said, in part, that they believe allowing such claims to proceed in court would open the door for countless such claims to be brought by passionate sports fans. back Johnathan Abram, who was seen on the HBO reality show being cautioned about being too aggressive with his teammates.

The fights occurred on the opposite field from where Abram and the Raiders defense were taking on the Rams offense.

Rams star defensive tackle Aaron Donald was involved in the first incident with Raiders guard Gabe Jackson, who was injured later in the day.

Things appeared to have calmed down in the pass rush drill only to flare up again minutes later with Raiders rookie offensive tackle

Tyler Roemer in the middle of the fracas after having his helmet ripped off.

Rams coach Sean Mcvay sprinted over from the offensive field to intervene but wasn’t concerned about the extracurri­cular activity.

“It was really already under control by the time I got over there,” he said. “Our leaders did a great job of getting things under control, and we’ll use that as a learning opportunit­y and I think we did.”

Raiders coach Jon Gruden agreed.

“We had one scuffle that was uncalled for, but I thought for the most part our players played hard and we got a lot of work done,” he said.

Players from both teams unsurprisi­ngly cited the other team’s frustratio­n at losing the action on the field for the rising tensions.

The “Hard Knocks” crew captured the action from multiple angles, so the footage probably will air on the show’s second episode Tuesday night.

The teams will meet in their preseason opener Saturday in Oakland.

Mcvay assesses Raiders defense

Jared Goff and the Rams’ firstteam offense got into a good rhythm in head-to-head drills, but Mcvay offered an encouragin­g assessment about the Raiders’ defense.

“Lot of new faces, lot of speed, lot of physicalit­y,” Mcvay said after facing the unit for the second straight day. “I think you’re seeing guys get more and more comfortabl­e with (Raiders defensive coordinato­r Paul Guenther’s) system. There’s definitely some nice intricacie­s to it that make it really challengin­g to an offense.

“They’ve got some good depth up front, some middle linebacker­s that can play, and they’ve got some physical safeties and corners that can run. I think you can expect them to be a really tough matchup for offenses this year.”

Raiders linebacker Tahir Whitehead was pleased with how the defense performed in its first chance against another team.

“I think the last two days were great for us,” he said. “You’re going against a top-ranked offense, great team that went to the Super Bowl last year. The last two days were definitely a challenge for us to see where we were as a defense and how far along we are. I think in year two of the scheme, we’re definitely a lot further along than we were last year.”

Injury report

Gruden said wide receiver Ryan Grant and linebacker Kyle Wilber are day to day with back injuries. Neither practiced Thursday.

Linebacker Nicholas Morrow’s absence was more unusual for an NFL training camp. “He had a dental appointmen­t today that we couldn’t pass up,” Gruden said. “So he’s excused. I talked to the dentist.”

Contact Adam Hill at ahill@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Adamhilllv­rj on Twitter.

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