Tag Archives: Roger Goodell

Will Broward County Commissioners Spend More Money On Florida Panthers?

seeredBroward County Commissioners need to spend another $225,000 to figure out if they have a bad deal with the Florida Panthers NHL team. On Tuesday, Commissioners will be asked to give more money to Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, a full-service brokerage and investment banking firm based in St. Louis, Missouri. The previous deal called for a $117,000 payment from Broward taxpayers. Stifel has retained the services of Barrett Sports Group, LLC to help determine how much more money the public would be willing to spend on the team.

According to its website, Barrett Sports Group, LLC (BSG) offers “strategic management consulting services to the sports and entertainment industry.” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell says BSG founder Daniel S. Barrett “has successfully been involved in NFL stadium development processes and has demonstrated intelligence, professionalism, and an ability to achieve positive results.” On the “what’s new” section of its website, BSG declares it “has been hired to estimate the fair market value of a confidential National Hockey League (NHL) team.”

In the agreement with Broward County, BSG will perform extensive research in “Task 2.” BSG will perform a “Market and Financial Analysis of the Arena Without The Panthers.” Florida Panthers’ ownership, past and present, have repeatedly denied any plans to move the franchise out of Broward. The only mention of a potential Panthers’ move came in February 2014 by Broward Commissioner Barbara Sharief, a strong supporter of a controversial taxpayer bailout of the troubled hockey franchise.

In January 2014, REDBROWARD obtained a copy of the Panthers’ new proposal which promised to field a competitive NHL team while hosting events that “drive economic impact to Broward County and grow the BB&T Center site as a western Broward economic engine.” The proposal claimed new Panthers owner Vinnie Viola reduced and refinanced team debt, cut administrative costs, and invested in player payroll. The Panthers pledged to pay off nearly $11 million in county loans three years early.

In return, the Panthers want taxpayers to pick up their yearly $4.5 million contribution to arena bond payments. The public is already paying nearly $9 million.

The new agreement with Stifel states BSG’s “primary purpose…is to determine the strength of the market to support the BB&T Center without the presence of the Panthers.” In addition to demographics and market studies, the agreement calls on BSG to “identify and assess the level and type of public funding support necessary to ensure the financial viability of the BB&T Center and the Florida Panthers.” BSG will “assess the level of public support received at comparable NHL and NBA arenas, our extensive experience on similar projects, as well as our knowledge of the local political landscape in order to evaluate potential public participation and any opportunities or barriers that could exist in the local market.”

Hmm, sounds like taxpayers are paying big bucks to BSG who will paint a bleak picture of life without the Florida Panthers (even though the team has NEVER threatened to move). Then, BSG will help the Broward County Commissioners sell another taxpayer funded bailout of the Florida Panthers to taxpayers.

Only in Broward.

 

NFL Gives Four Players Harsh Penalties In Saints Bounty-Gate

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Red Broward was at NFL Annual Meetings in Palm Beach last month when NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell received news that the public was firmly behind his handling of the New Orleans Saints bounty-gate. Today the NFL announced the suspension of four players including University Of Miami standout Jonathan Vilma. Vilma was suspended for the entire 2012 season. NFL says Vilma offered $10,000 to anyone who injured quarterbacks Kurt Warner and Brett Favre. Here is the statement from the NFL:

“FOUR PLAYERS SUSPENDED FOR PARTICIPATION IN SAINTS’ PAY-FOR-PERFORMANCE/BOUNTY PROGRAM

Four players – Scott Fujita, Anthony Hargrove, Will Smith, and Jonathan Vilma – were notified today that they have been suspended without pay for conduct detrimental to the NFL as a result of their leadership roles in the New Orleans Saints’ pay-for-performance/bounty program that endangered player safety over three seasons from 2009-2011. Participation by players in any such program is prohibited by the NFL Constitution and Bylaws, the standard NFL Player Contract, and the Collective Bargaining Agreement.

The specific discipline was determined by Commissioner Roger Goodell after a thorough review of extensive evidence corroborated by multiple independent sources. Under Article 46 of the Collective Bargaining Agreement and the standard NFL Player Contract, a player is subject to discipline by the commissioner for conduct detrimental to the integrity of and public confidence in the NFL. The discipline imposed today for such detrimental conduct is as follows:

* Scott Fujita (now with the Cleveland Browns) is suspended without pay for the first three games of the 2012 regular season. The record established that Fujita, a linebacker, pledged a significant amount of money to the prohibited pay-for-performance/bounty pool during the 2009 NFL Playoffs when he played for the Saints. The pool to which he pledged paid large cash rewards for ‘cart-offs’ and ‘knockouts,’ plays during which an opposing player was injured.

* Defensive lineman Anthony Hargrove (now with the Green Bay Packers) is suspended without pay for the first eight games of the 2012 regular season. Hargrove actively participated in the program while a member of the Saints. Hargrove submitted a signed declaration to the league that established not only the existence of the program at the Saints, but also that he knew about and participated in it. The evidence showed that Hargrove told at least one player on another team that Vikings quarterback Brett Favre was a target of a large bounty during the NFC Championship Game in January of 2010. Hargrove also actively obstructed the league’s 2010 investigation into the program by being untruthful to investigators.

* Will Smith of the Saints is suspended without pay for the first four games of the 2012 regular season. Smith, a defensive end, assisted Saints defensive coordinator Gregg Williams in establishing and funding the program during a period in which he was a captain and leader of the defensive unit. Multiple independent sources also confirmed that Smith pledged significant sums to the program pool for ‘cart-offs’ and ‘knockouts’ of opposing players.

* Linebacker Jonathan Vilma of the Saints is suspended without pay for the 2012 NFL season, effective immediately per league policy for season-long suspensions. The investigation concluded that while a captain of the defensive unit Vilma assisted Coach Williams in establishing and funding the program. Multiple independent sources also confirmed that Vilma offered a specific bounty — $10,000 in cash – to any player who knocked Arizona quarterback Kurt Warner out of the 2009 Divisional Playoff Game and later pledged the same amount to anyone who knocked Minnesota quarterback Brett Favre out of the 2009 NFC Championship Game the following week (played on January 24, 2010). Vilma is eligible to be reinstated after the Super Bowl in 2013.

Fujita, Hargrove, and Smith may participate in all off-season activity, including preseason games, prior to the suspensions taking effect. Each player disciplined today is entitled to appeal the decision within three days. If an appeal is filed, Commissioner Goodell would hold a hearing at which the player may speak on his behalf and be represented by counsel.

‘It is the obligation of everyone, including the players on the field, to ensure that rules designed to promote player safety, fair play, and the integrity of the game are adhered to and effectively and consistently enforced,’ Commissioner Goodell said. ‘Respect for the men that play the game starts with the way players conduct themselves with each other on the field.’

The evidence conclusively demonstrated that from 2009-2011 Saints players of their own accord pledged significant amounts of their own money toward bounties, that players accepted payments for ‘cart-offs’ and ‘knockouts’ of injured opposing players, and that the payout amounts doubled and tripled for playoff games.

Commissioner Goodell concluded, as he did with the Saints’ non-player employees, that it was appropriate to focus on those individuals who had a higher degree of responsibility and whose conduct warranted special attention. While a significant number of players participated in the pay-for-performance program, whether by contributing funds to the pool or collecting cash rewards, the players disciplined participated at a different and more significant level, Commissioner Goodell noted.

‘In assessing player discipline,’ Commissioner Goodell said, ‘I focused on players who were in leadership positions at the Saints; contributed a particularly large sum of money toward the program; specifically contributed to a bounty on an opposing player; demonstrated a clear intent to participate in a program that potentially injured opposing players; sought rewards for doing so; and/or obstructed the 2010 investigation.’

Each of the four players disciplined today met one or more of those criteria, Commissioner Goodell said.

The evidence supporting today’s disciplinary decisions is based on extensive documentation and interviews with multiple sources. The information was developed by NFL Security, working with independent forensic analysts, and the disciplinary decisions are each based on evidence that has been independently corroborated by multiple sources. The facts supporting the discipline issued today are largely the same as the facts that Commissioner Goodell relied upon in March in assessing discipline on the club and several non-player employees. Those facts have been part of the public record for two months and have not been disputed by the team or the individuals involved.

‘No bounty program can exist without active player participation,’ Commissioner Goodell said. ‘The evidence clearly showed that the players being held accountable today willingly and enthusiastically embraced the bounty program. Players put the vast majority of the money into this program and they share responsibility for playing by the rules and protecting each other within those rules.’

The NFL Players Association received the confidential March 2 and March 21 reports on the Saints matter that were distributed to the clubs. In addition, members of the NFL staff, including the NFL Security investigators, met with NFLPA officials to review the results of their investigation. A number of current and former players, including each player disciplined today, were offered the opportunity to be interviewed with counsel present. One player (Hargrove) submitted a written statement in which he did not dispute the existence of the program, but no player agreed to be interviewed in person. In addition, the NFLPA publicly stated that it conducted its own investigation into this matter, but it has shared no information from that investigation with the NFL.

Commissioner Goodell also has advised the NFLPA of the names of all other players shown by the NFL’s investigation to have participated in the Saints’ pay-for-performance/bounty program but were not disciplined. The commissioner again invited the union to provide recommendations on how best to promote fair play, player safety and the elimination of bounties from the game at all levels. He said that identifying the other participants may assist the union in its stated desire to advance those goals.

Discipline for the Saints and club management was announced by the NFL on March 21. The Saints were fined $500,000 and forfeited two second-round draft choices (one in 2012 and one in 2013). In addition, suspensions without pay were issued to former defensive coordinator Gregg Williams (indefinitely), head coach Sean Payton (2012 NFL season), general manager Mickey Loomis (first eight regular-season games of 2012), and assistant head coach Joe Vitt (first six regular-season games of 2012).”