USA TODAY US Edition

Goodell, players team up to fight social injustice

Nancy Armour: NFL backs players more than fans, outspoken owners and Trump want to admit.

- Nancy Armour Columnist

NEW ORLEANS – It can be tough to figure out how the NFL really feels about the player protests and, more important, the issues of race and in- equality that sparked them.

The owners say they’re committed to social justice efforts yet adopt a misguided code of conduct for the national anthem that inflames the issue only to then table it. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones huffs and puffs about decorum

during the anthem and then refuses to take off his hat. The league stays largely quiet when Nike, one of its biggest corporate partners, makes Colin Kaepernick the face of its latest marketing campaign but continues to fight the quarterbac­k’s collusion lawsuit.

But perhaps the NFL is behind the players more than fans, a few outspoken owners and President Donald Trump know or care to admit. To get a glimpse of this, look to a New Orleans courtroom this week.

There, for the better part of an hour, Commission­er Roger Goodell sat next to the grandfathe­r of a young man awaiting a hearing to see if his bail would be reduced and, if so, if he’d have the money to afford it.

Goodell asked about the grandson’s arrest, on robbery and armed robbery charges, the progress of the case and his family. When the grandfathe­r returned from a brief conference with a lawyer, Goodell asked how it went. And when it was time for the commission­er to leave, Goodell extended his hand and wished the older man luck.

In all, Goodell spent almost nine hours here Tuesday with other league officials and Saints linebacker Demario Davis and tight end Benjamin Watson getting a crash course on the inequities of the cash-bond system, the broad powers of district attorneys and the dangers those can present, and the challenges associated with re-entry.

The Players Coalition, formed by Malcolm Jenkins and Anquan Boldin to help coordinate players’ social justice efforts, organized the day. It’s the latest “Listen and Learn” event the group is hosting across the country to educate players — league and team officials, too, if they wish to attend — on the issues plaguing either the criminal justice system, policing, or education and economic structures.

Goodell took notes and asked questions. More than once, he asked what the NFL could do.

“How do we make an impact?” Goodell asked at the end of the day. “I think we have a better understand­ing of the problems. What are the solutions?

“(It’s important) to bring awareness,” he added, “but more than bring awareness, bring impact.”

“How do we make an impact? ... What are the solutions? (It’s important) to bring awareness, but more than bring awareness, bring impact.”

Sight of people in chains

It’s been two years since Kaepernick first took a knee to draw attention to the racism that underlies our criminal justice and economic systems. The protests spread quickly in a league whose players are predominan­tly AfricanAme­rican, but their message was overlooked by people who chose instead to paint them as disrespect­ful to the country, the flag, the military, apple pie and everything else.

To try and defuse the tensions, the NFL began meeting last season with members of the Players Coalition, eventually agreeing to contribute $90 million to social justice efforts.

Cynics said the NFL was trying to buy the players’ silence, and it’s true the protests have mostly ended. But the players were never protesting for the sake of protesting. They were protesting to drive change, and Goodell’s presence Tuesday, along with that of Saints owner Gayle Benson and Saints President Dennis Lauscha for part of the day, shows that the NFL is genuine in its desire to help fix the fault lines in our country.

“I expect to hear that from Ben and Demario,” said Norris Henderson, founder of Voice of the Experience­d, a group dedicated to restoring voting rights of people who have been incarcerat­ed. “But to hear the commission­er taking this in and trying to get educated and … understand­ing the roles these individual­s are taking inside their different communitie­s and the importance of it, for him to see all this stuff up close and personal and hear all the challenges people face daily is huge.”

If the NFL — if Goodell — wasn’t sincere, the commission­er would have shown up once, made his presence known with a media blitz and then disappeare­d. But he has been an active, if under-the-radar, partner. This is the second Listen and Learn he’s attended, having been at the inaugural session last year in Philadelph­ia.

The Players Coalition has since hosted Listen and Learns in Baltimore, Boston, Detroit and New York and did one in Atlanta on Wednesday.

Goodell did not travel with an entou- rage Tuesday or hold a news conference after, and only one person appeared to recognize him during the day. He showed up ready to work, giving each of the speakers his full attention. He often jotted notes as they spoke. Not once did he pull out his phone to check email or leave the room to take a call.

After the bail hearings, community organizers asked attendees to break into small groups and discuss what they’d seen and how it made them feel. Watson was visibly upset at the use of chains on people who haven’t yet been convicted, saying the sight and sound reminded him of slavery.

As Watson wondered about the psychologi­cal impact that kind of dehumaniza­tion has, and its trickledow­n effect, Goodell nodded and said he’d had similar thoughts.

“You’re going to have that going through your head,” he said.

‘Relay the informatio­n to owners’

Goodell’s participat­ion is not meant to overshadow or hijack the work the players have done. Already, lobbying efforts by members of the Players Coalition have resulted in changes to the criminal justice system in Pennsylvan­ia and Massachuse­tts. Davis and Watson wrote a letter in May to Louisiana legislator­s endorsing a bill that restored voting rights to the previously incarcerat­ed, helping secure its passage.

But Goodell’s involvemen­t cannot be overlooked, Davis said.

“Not everybody understand­s why we’re out on the front lines of this,” Davis said, addressing Goodell after the group had lunch at Café Reconcile, which provides job training for at-risk youth.

“Having you here in this environmen­t with us, nobody is better than you to go and relay the informatio­n to the owners about why we can’t just pull away from this. We can’t.”

What results from Goodell’s presence Tuesday remains to be seen. He asked specific questions about who has the power to change Louisiana’s practice of using bail money to fund its court system, as well as an upcoming ballot initiative to require unanimous jury verdicts for felony conviction­s. (Louisiana and Oregon are the only two states where a person can be convicted without a unanimous verdict.)

He seemed to be particular­ly interested in the far-reaching impact cash bail has — if someone can’t pay their bail, they will likely lose their job, maybe their kids, despite not even being adjudicate­d yet — and the lack of resources for women who have been incarcerat­ed. He shook his head and winced while hearing four men tell their stories of being wrongly convicted and serving two decades or more before being released.

But the potential power of the NFL’s partnershi­p with the players was clear by the end of the afternoon. The company that runs the Superdome hires graduates of a training program for federal inmates, Lauscha said, an initiative that began after he read Watson’s 2015 book, “Under Our Skin: Getting Real About Race. Getting Free from the Fears and Frustratio­ns that Divide Us.” What could they do, Lauscha asked, to help communicat­e that message to the rest of New Orleans’ business community?

And after hearing Syrita Steib-Martin say that her organizati­on, which provides resources to women who’ve been incarcerat­ed, needed more space, Benson offered Operation Restoratio­n an office in Benson Tower. There are many state agencies in the building, Lauscha noted, and he hoped Operation Restoratio­n’s new proximity to them would open additional doors.

“This message we were able to translate will go to places that we would never have the opportunit­y to be in front of,” said Henderson, the founder of Voice of the Experience­d.

The messages on this day were important and productive. There were no incendiary memes or bumper stickers, nor any divisive tweets. Instead there was the NFL commission­er and NFL players, working together to try to find solutions.

NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell

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USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? PLAYERS COALITION ?? Benjamin Watson, NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell and Cam Jordan listen and take notes Tuesday during a “Listen and Learn” session.
PLAYERS COALITION Benjamin Watson, NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell and Cam Jordan listen and take notes Tuesday during a “Listen and Learn” session.
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 ?? AP ?? Current and former NFL players Malcolm Jenkins, left, Anquan Boldin and Devin McCourty took part in a March criminal justice issues session at Harvard.
AP Current and former NFL players Malcolm Jenkins, left, Anquan Boldin and Devin McCourty took part in a March criminal justice issues session at Harvard.

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