The Oklahoman

Goodell downplays issues with Patriots, Raiders

- BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nothing produces awkward NFL moments quite like watching the commission­er parry all those thorny issues involving the league’s oldest and newest troublemak­ers — the Raiders and Patriots.

Reporters spent time poking Roger Goodell about “Deflategat­e,” the Raiders’ now-threatened move to Las Vegas, and other delicate topics at the commission­er’s lessformal, less-crowded and, frankly, less-newsy preSuper Bowl news conference, held on a Wednesday this year instead of the traditiona­l Friday afternoon slot.

Going sans necktie and speaking in a room about half the size as his usual Super Bowl venue, Goodell insisted nothing was offkilter between the league and either team. He said “there’s a great deal more work to be done” before the Raiders can move to Las Vegas, a reality reinforced after both casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and a backup financier, Goldman Sachs, pulled out of the stadium deal this week. The league is supposed to decide on the Las Vegas move in March.

“But if any key aspect is changed, the process could be slowed down,” Eric Grubman, the league’s executive vice president of business ventures, told The Associated Press.

Goodell said it was unlikely a casino owner could own a stake in a stadium, which would seem to disqualify Adelson anyway. About the more delicate question of whether it’s good business for the league, which has always disdained gambling, to stick a franchise in the gambling capital of America, the commission­er said the league is in touch with the reality that gambling “exists throughout our world.”

“We’ve always said there’s a fine line between team sports gambling and the NFL,” Goodell said. “We want to protect the integrity of our game and that’s something we’ll always do.”

The commission­er was only four days away from potentiall­y handing the Lombardi Trophy to Patriots owner Robert Kraft . It would be the most awkward commission­erowner handoff since 1981, when Pete Rozelle presented Raiders owner Al Davis with the trophy while Davis was suing the league over Rozelle’s attempt to block the team’s move from Oakland to Los Angeles. Fittingly, Goodell took five questions about the Patriots, almost all of them designed to put him on the defensive. The core of it: “Deflategat­e,” and the four-game suspension he levied against Patriots quarterbac­k Tom Brady to start the season.

Among the highlights: Why didn’t Goodell attend a Patriots playoff game, while heading to Atlanta twice? Has he spoken with Brady? How is he getting along with Kraft?

“We have a disagreeme­nt about what occurred,” Goodell said. “We have been very transparen­t about what we think the violation was. We went through a lengthy process. We disagree about that . ... I’m not afraid of disagreeme­nt. And I don’t think disagreeme­nt leads to distrust or hatred.”

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