San Diego Union-Tribune

ST. LOUIS LAWSUIT HITTING ALL TEAMS

- BY SAM FARMER Farmer writes for the L.A. Times.

The Rams and NFL paid $790 million last year to settle a lawsuit with St. Louis over the team’s relocation to Los Angeles.

Now, the league is sorting how to cover that bill and already has spread some of that staggering expense over all 32 teams — meaning everyone is on the hook for at least several million. Owners discussed this at their annual spring meeting, which concluded here Tuesday.

According to a report by The Athletic, the NFL already has taken $7.5 million from each club by deducting that amount from revenuesha­ring payments. If the 31 other teams contribute that amount, that’s $232.5 million, or roughly a third of the settlement. The L.A. Times confirmed that the teams were assessed those payments, although not the specific amount.

It’s still a hotly contested dispute among the teams, because Rams owner Stan Kroenke was required to sign an indemnific­ation agreement as part of his deal to relocate the team. The owners of the Chargers and Raiders signed identical agreements to cover the “costs, including legal fees and other litigation expenses” to defend challenges to their respective moves.

While the Rams were touting their stadium in Inglewood, the Chargers and Raiders had joined forces to back a competing proposal in Carson. The Rams contend those competing teams outlined for St. Louis officials why the Rams weren’t in compliance with the relocation guidelines, which eventually was at the heart of the St. Louis lawsuit.

So it’s Kroenke’s contention that if people within the league provided St. Louis with a blueprint of how best to sue the Rams, he shouldn’t be responsibl­e for shoulderin­g the entire settlement.

The issue isn’t expected to be resolved anytime soon.

Pro Bowl likely gone

The Pro Bowl is on the brink. The game is little more than a pantomime of actual football, and the league is likely going to drop it in favor of some type of event that honors the chosen players. There will be more discussion of this in the weeks to come.

“I’ve spoken to several players myself about what works and what doesn’t work,” Commission­er Roger Goodell said. “I think the conclusion was that the game itself doesn’t work and that we needed to find a different way to celebrate our players. … We talked a lot about how some of the events around the Pro Bowl are extraordin­arily popular, whether it’s the quarterbac­k challenge or other events. So those are things that we’ll probably build on.”

Notable

The league extended its deal with Indianapol­is, so the scouting combine will remain there for at least the next two years. Dallas and L.A. also submitted bids to play host to the annual event.

Owners agreed to make some changes to the Rooney Rule, aimed at diversifyi­ng both the coaching and team executive ranks. Moving forward, when hiring a quarterbac­k coach, a team must interview at least one female or minority candidate from outside the franchise for that position.

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