Los Angeles Times

CBA in NFL faces challenge

- Staff and wire reports — Sam Farmer — Gary Klein

Free-agent safety Eric Reid wants an investigat­ion and a revote on the collective bargaining agreement between the NFL and its players because of language added to the accord after it was ratified.

In a letter Monday to the NFL Players Assn., Reid’s attorneys said language in the CBA was altered after March 15, when players voted 1,019-959 in favor of the 10-year agreement.

His lawyers point to a change in the language in the version of the CBA posted on the NFLPA website. The discrepanc­y pertains to which players are eligible for disability benefits. The NFL declined comment, and the NFLPA did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the allegation­s.

“We’ve been obviously critical of the CBA from the outset because it takes from disabled players. And so in advising them, we were looking at it and pointing out where they had issues and where they were going to be likely getting less money,” Ben Meiselas, Reid’s attorney, told the Associated Press. “And then we saw it, and we go, ‘I don’t remember seeing this in Paragraph B.’ ”

Said Meiselas: “Eric’s letter demands the invalidati­on and an investigat­ion and a revote because how do you stick in language that players didn’t know they were voting for?”

In 2018, Reid and Colin Kaepernick, former San Francisco teammates, filed collusion grievances against the NFL that were settled last year.

Sports business consultant Marc Ganis said he is unaware that a signed CBA has been subject to a second ratificati­on vote or been thrown out by the courts or the National Labor Relations

Board.

“The deal has been signed,” said Ganis, who for years has worked closely with the NFL and various team owners. “I don’t know of any way for a revote. I suppose it’s conceivabl­e that a judge could order a return to the precise original language, but for anything there would need to be a material significan­t set of changes and he would need to demonstrat­e fraud of some sort, which is not the least bit evident.

“Also, adjustment­s are made constantly to such documents. Clarificat­ions. Items that may have been unclear to become clearer. That kind of thing. This strikes as sour grapes by someone who didn’t get his way in the vote.”

The Rams maintained some of their secondary depth by re-signing cornerback Dont’e Deayon.

Deayon, 26, spent most of last season on the practice squad before playing in three games on special teams and defense. He made three tackles.

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