jmt57
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Not sure if you saw this article yet. It is from Peter King at SI, and he speaks about the hypocrisy of the NFL in selective enforcement of their rules. Specifically, the rule about tampering with soon to be free agents is ignored, even though a memo was sent out to all teams (sound familiar?)
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/writers/peter_king/03/02/cleveland/3.html
I think I wish the NFL would, once and for all, get serious about enforcing tampering. I bring to your attention a Jan. 31 memo from the league that I obtained, reminding teams to lay off players from other teams until the opening of the free-agency period, which began Friday at 12:01 a.m. ET.
The memo read, in part: "You are specifically reminded that any contact -- direct or indirect -- by one club with players under contract to another club, about potential future employment, is not permitted. Such contacts could potentially interfere with the employer-employee relationship of the second club. Further, any public or private statement of interest, qualified or unqualified, in another club's player to the player's agent or representative, or to the news media, is a violation of the Anti-Tampering Policy.
"These rules are in effect at all times that a player remains under contract; the anticipated expiration of a player contract at the beginning of the upcoming League year (that is, a player's expectation that he will soon become a free agent) does not excuse impermissible contact prior to such contract expiration.''
And so I see all kinds of agents talking to teams at the scouting combine in Indianapolis. I see teams agreeing to terms with players as they do every year in the first hour of free agency (as Miami did with a guard, Justin Smiley of the 49ers). And, by the way, how did I know the Eagles would be the leaders in the clubhouse for Asante, including details about the money in the deal, nine days ago?
We've got to stop pretending this doesn't exist, and the league has to stop selectively enforcing some rules and not others. If there's an anti-tampering rule, the NFL must enforce it the way it enforces other rules.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/writers/peter_king/03/02/cleveland/3.html
I think I wish the NFL would, once and for all, get serious about enforcing tampering. I bring to your attention a Jan. 31 memo from the league that I obtained, reminding teams to lay off players from other teams until the opening of the free-agency period, which began Friday at 12:01 a.m. ET.
The memo read, in part: "You are specifically reminded that any contact -- direct or indirect -- by one club with players under contract to another club, about potential future employment, is not permitted. Such contacts could potentially interfere with the employer-employee relationship of the second club. Further, any public or private statement of interest, qualified or unqualified, in another club's player to the player's agent or representative, or to the news media, is a violation of the Anti-Tampering Policy.
"These rules are in effect at all times that a player remains under contract; the anticipated expiration of a player contract at the beginning of the upcoming League year (that is, a player's expectation that he will soon become a free agent) does not excuse impermissible contact prior to such contract expiration.''
And so I see all kinds of agents talking to teams at the scouting combine in Indianapolis. I see teams agreeing to terms with players as they do every year in the first hour of free agency (as Miami did with a guard, Justin Smiley of the 49ers). And, by the way, how did I know the Eagles would be the leaders in the clubhouse for Asante, including details about the money in the deal, nine days ago?
We've got to stop pretending this doesn't exist, and the league has to stop selectively enforcing some rules and not others. If there's an anti-tampering rule, the NFL must enforce it the way it enforces other rules.
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