Showing posts with label millions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label millions. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Happy Valley's Legal Woes Continue

By Scott Daniels, Esq., NFL Draft Bible

The football program at Penn State has always been revered for it's class and demeanor. The infamous blue and white helmets have forever been synonymous with a "blue-collar work ethic" and the Nittany Lions have long refused to take top notch athletes who don't present genuine individual character.

Their field general, the beloved Joe Paterno, is a living legend in college football due in most part for his ability to win with upstanding, disciplined individuals, not just athletic specimens.

As of recent, Penn State's unblemished image is beginning to resemble that of the 2007 Cincinnati Bengals. Numerous football players are seeing more of the court room and less of the weight room this offseason.

The latest incident involved Andrew Quarless, a sophomore tight end, who was suspended indefinitely for an unspecified violation of team rules. To make matters worse, Quarless is no stranger to trouble on campus. Quarless was already suspended last season for underage drinking and missed the first two regular season games of 2007.

Quarless becomes the sixth Penn State football player to be arrested this offseason and the team's legal problems range from disorderly conduct to campus brawls. I know these kids are still in college, but six player arrests in one offseason is downright embarrassing.

What these players don't realize is that their detrimental off-the-field conduct, although it's occurring at the collegiate level, will have monumental effects on their potential professional careers. Millions of dollars are at stake for those chosen to play in the NFL and character has evolved into a mandatory piece of criteria for NFL scouts when evaluating players.
(see http://nfldraftbiblethelegalline.blogspot.com/2007/08/legal-line-vol-ii.html).

Hopefully, Joepa can remedy an already tumultuous off season for the Nittany Lions. It seems that his players are in need of some guidance and supervision. Not that Penn State football players need to be reminded, but in the eyes of the law, collegiate athletes are held to the same standard of conduct as regular students.

Maybe Joepa needs to remind his team what made them so successful in the first place.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Possible Lockout in the NFL?

By Scott Daniels, Esq., NFL Draft Bible

If you haven't realized yet, the National Football League is clearly the most dominant of the four major sports in America. Ratings prove it. Revenue proves it. The circus that surrounds the Superbowl proves it.

NFL players are signing monumental contracts and teams are raking in millions with the success of the league. While baseball is attempting to weather the steroid storm, hockey is still recovering from a lockout a few years ago. And finally, the National Basketball League is more concerned about globalization than popularizing the sport in the states.

Following what has been dubbed one of the greatest Superbowl's of all time, the NFL appears to be virtually incapable of failure, even with Spygate and the intermittent presence of a few bad apples.

Well, it seems appearance can be misleading.

The NFL may be in serious trouble.

As many of you are well aware, the body of law in the NFL is the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA). It's essentially a long list of bylaws agreed upon by the owners and the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA). It's like a constitution for professional football.

The current CBA is slated to expire in 2011. Interestingly enough, the player's association or the owners can opt out of this agreement on or before November 8, 2008. If that happens, 2009 will be a normal season and in 2010, the league will not have a salary cap.

With no working CBA in place, a lockout or player strike would be inevitable. Apparently, the owners and the players are very far apart at this point. The main dispute, as it was before the two sides came to an agreement to extend the current CBA in 2006, revolves around revenue sharing.

The owners feel that the players are receiving more than they deserve through the current revenue sharing program and some owners have began to quietly express their discern about this. In fact, Gene Upshaw, executive director of the Player's Association, is preparing for the owners to opt out of the current agreement.

The financial ramifications of a strike or lockout are huge. The National Hockey League suffered a huge decline in popularity and lost more than just money after their strike in 2004. Thousands of loyal fans simply became disinterested.

So, once again, as we've seen so many times in sports, the players and owners are at odds over dollars. With millions of dollars comes greed. Both sides will have to make concessions, or we could face the real possibility of a strike in the NFL.