June 19, 2013

NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps

c2a55aee119be977f85baa2381557f0c NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps
#54 of the watches the action during the game against the Detroit Lions at Ford Field on December 30, 2012 in Detroit, Michigan. The Bears defeted the Lions 26-24.
(December 29, 2012 – Source: Leon Halip/ North America)

(PhatzRadio / AP) — INDIANAPOLIS — Musings, observations and the from a somewhat slow first day at the NFL’s annual scouting combine at

• New Eagles met a league-wide media contingent for the first time here Thursday, and if there was any news made, it was him making it clear he doesn’t endorse the notion of Philadelphia trading second-year quarterback Nick Foles.

“I want to coach Nick,” Kelly said. “I want to spend time with him and see him.”

Kelly followed up by adding that any or general manager would listen to offers, but said he knew of no trade conversations involving Foles, with Kansas City and ex-Eagles head or otherwise.

Sounds reasonable to me. Unless he’s 100 percent certain Foles can’t run his fast-break style of offense, why should he ship him away and limit his options at the game’s most crucial position in of his Philadelphia tenure? You don’t want to be the next 1992 , making a mistake that you’ll have to live with for the next couple decades. In this case, I’d rather make a Foles deal a year too late rather than a year too early.

Kelly didn’t sound quite as eager to coach Eagles underachieving and over-paid cornerback , however. A possible (and some would say likely) cut, Asomugha was actually benched by Reid in the midst of a Week 17 blowout loss at the Giants, which seemed to signal the end of his two-year stay in Philly. He’s due $15 million in 2013, and if he does return to the Eagles, it won’t be at that number. When asked Asomugha’s status with the team, Kelly did a verbal two-step, declaring “I think Nnamdi has a skill set (awkward pause) that can play football.”

As if there was ever a doubt.

Lastly, Kelly won points with the media when he dropped a line from the movie Wedding Crashers into his comments about reports that he was set to accept the Browns coach job last month. We reporters love it when a head coach shows a little pop culture cred.

“Erroneous,” said Kelly, of the reporting that he was on his way to Cleveland at one point. “And that’s a quote from Wedding Crashers.”

• Former Bears head coach Lovie Smith walked in the door in Chicago in 2004 talking about beating the arch-rival Packers and how much it would mean to his program. New Bears coach Marc Trestman? Not so much.

Trestman surprisingly did everything in his power to downplay the significance of the NFL’s oldest and most historic rivalry in speaking with the media on Thursday, and I have to wonder if that’s a tone deaf move, given how much the Bears-Packers series means to the McCaskey family, his new boss. Maybe Trestman was just lowering the bar for his team, given that Chicago has lost six in a row to Green Bay and eight of their past nine, but it was still startling to hear a Bears coach all but yawn when the Packers were mentioned.

“I’m not as familiar (with the NFC North) as I’m going to be down the road, but certainly I recognize there’s a rivalry in Chicago, and that’s important,” Trestman said. “But we have to treat every team we’re playing with the utmost respect. There’s difference makers on every team, we all know that, without going into names. And in every game you have to try and neutralize the difference makers first.

“It’s a highly competitive division and highly competitive league and everything starts in your division. But you’re not going to play your division harder than you’re going to play teams outside of your division. That’d be disrespecting the game completely. That’s the reality.”

Really? Here’s the reality of your new life in Chicago, Marc: They’re going to want you to play the hated Packers harder than anyone else, and beat them your fair share of times. No disrespect intended.

Smith finished just 8-11 against Green Bay, after winning seven of his first 10 games against the Packers. As much as any reason, the failure to beat Green Bay in recent years (see 2010 NFC title game in Soldier Field, and an 0-4 mark against the Pack in Chicago’s playoff-less 2011-2012) is the cause of Smith being an ex-Bears coach and Trestman’s arrival. So maybe Trestman should keep that in mind.

• I like Trestman, have known him since the ’90s, and thought the Bears made a good hire when they brought him south from Montreal and the CFL, where he was the Alouettes head coach for the past five years. But I get the concerns about him coming across as too intellectual or too soft-spoken to command a locker room full of today’s NFL players. It’s a perception he didn’t do much to erase Thursday when asked to describe his coaching style.

“It’s to create an environment that they (the players) can self-actualize,” Trestman said, before later going on to talk about having “a daily proactive plan, to create a sense of urgency to accomplish the daily task.”

No word yet on whether Bears middle will be self-actualizing in Chicago again this year.

• Titans head coach Mike Munchak is the guy who went out on the limb and re-hired disgraced former Saints defensive coordinator . And when it gets down to it, it wasn’t only because Williams and he have plenty of history and familiarity, and because there was a crying need to have Williams assist embattled Tennessee defensive coordinator Jerry Gray. All of those things played into his hiring, but there was more to it than just that.

“I felt he deserved a second chance,” said Munchak of Williams, who was added to the staff two weeks ago as a senior defensive assistant. “I felt the league felt that, and again, I thought he took responsibility for the things that happened (in ’ bounty scandal), and the things he was involved in. And I don’t see anything like that ever coming close to happening again.”

Gray may have the defensive coordinator title, but in reality, Williams will have a major role in leading the Titans defense this season. He has been in a supervisory role over Gray three times in their coaching careers, in Tennessee, Buffalo and Washington, and each time Gray’s secondary unit or defense had success with Williams calling the ultimate shots.

“I think that’s why Jerry was so excited when we talked about him,” Munchak said. “Some coordinators and some coaches are stubborn, they want to do it their own way, and they don’t want help. They don’t want to be told there’s better ways to do things. But I think Jerry’s open to becoming a better coach.

“I think that’s refreshing to have coaches like that, to have another resource in the building that he’s comfortable with, and that we felt would work well. It’s been a great fit, and I think Jerry’s going to be a better coordinator because of it, and obviously we assume we’re going to be much better defense because of it.”

It better work, and everybody in Tennessee knows it. Munchak and Co. are all coaching for their jobs in 2013, and if the Williams hiring doesn’t go well for the Titans, it may be difficult to see him ever getting another NFL opportunity.

• I’m beginning to think we’ll have a whole generation of kids growing up in America between the time the NFL and its players union agree to start testing for HGH, and when the actual testing begins. Or do I overstate things?

On Tuesday this week, the NFLPA held a media conference call to bemoan the lack of trust players have in league commissioner Roger Goodell in the post-Saints bounty saga era, implying that it has impacted and slowed action on a number of issues, HGH testing among them.

On Thursday, the NFL’s senior vice president of law and labor policy, Adolpho Birch, countered with claims that the NFLPA has essentially tried to re-negotiate parts of the 2011 collective bargaining agreement as it pertains to HGH testing and the scope of the commissioner’s authority. The union, Birch told a gathering of reporters here, is basically seeking to chip away at or renegotiate parts of the CBA they don’t like.

“There is an effort to go back and re-visit a lot of things that were agreed to, negotiated on extensively and agreed to by the parties,” Birch said. “And you can name any number of things over the past several months that represent efforts to take another look at things that are already decided. That’s everything from the implementation of HGH testing, to the commissioner’s authority on conduct detrimental cases, to any number of things.”

The union has been engaged in what seems to be a rather sustained practice of moving the goalposts when it comes to the implementation of HGH testing, first claiming it needed more research done via population studies on the testing levels of NFL players, and more recently seeking a stronger appeals process for players who produce positive tests.

“Those are the only type of conclusions that can be reached,” Birch said, of the union’s pattern of stalling on HGH, perhaps linking that issue to other issues it has problems with in regards to the recent CBA. “I do think, at the end of the day, that it is a disservice to all for us not to be able to focus on the issue at hand, particularly in the context of HGH testing.

“I know it has been a stall. I don’t know if it is a tactic. You can characterize it as you wish, but there is absolutely no reason for this to have taken this long and for us not to have testing implemented. We should have been more than a year into this (testing program) by now.”

• Scott Pioli and Mike Tannenbaum are solid people and football men and I know they’ll both be back working in the league soon enough. But I do find it curious that both recently fired general managers, who had their high-profile personnel swings and misses in recent years, are immediately put on television and asked to assess and predict the personnel moves that each and every NFL team needs to make this offseason.

And nobody even bats an eye, because that’s how the system works. Lose your football job because of shoddy personnel decision making, and immediately become a football expert who picks apart the personnel decision making of employed general managers. Is this a great country, or what?

• Count Detroit head coach Jim Schwartz among those who don’t seem worried about BYU defensive end Ezekiel Ansah being too much of a football novice to go in the top half of the first round. Schwartz coached the native of Ghana at the Senior Bowl last month, and came away impressed by his ability to absorb new information despite playing organized football since only 2010. Ansah is a freakishly gifted athlete, and figures to be one of the combine workout stars in Indy.

“A guy like him, he’s sort of new to the game, and really coming in from a different background,” Schwartz said. “It was interesting to see him being able to grasp new concepts. It’s one thing when you’re out of school for three or four years and you can sort of learn as you go, but to see him go in and improve every day in practice, and have the game that he had — he had a very productive game — I think he went a long way to answering a lot of questions about his background and his aptitude at a setting like the Senior Bowl. He put down some good game tape.”

Ansah measured 6-foot-5 1/4, 274 pounds at the Senior Bowl, and he’s a former track star who once ran 200 meters in 21.9 seconds. He had never even seen an American football game before he came to the States, and the Cougars played him at end, nose tackle, defensive tackle and outside linebacker. The comparisons to Giants 2010 first-round pick Jason Pierre-Paul have come fast and furious for Ansah in recent months, with 62 tackles in 2012, including 13 tackles for loss, 4 1/2 sacks, nine pass deflections, one interception and a forced fumble.

• Offensive linemen are usually on one particular side of the blame game, but Texas A&M offensive tackle Luke Joeckel — a potential first overall pick in this year’s draft — actually flipped the script once, yelling at his quarterback for being sacked. The audacity.

The quarterback in this case was his twin brother, Matt, who was born two minutes before he was, so I suppose Joeckel knew he could get away with the breech in etiquette and protocol.

“My junior year in (high school) I was pancaking this guy, and Matt bounces out of the pocket, and I pancake the guy right into Matt’s legs,” Joeckel told the media throng at the combine. “I get up and instead of him yelling at me, I start yelling at him, saying, ‘You gave me a sack. You’ve got to be a better athlete than that.’ He never chewed me out for giving up sacks. I chewed him out once for making me give up a sack. That’s kind of how our relationship is.”

• Quote of the day, from the Bears’ Trestman, when asked about the NFL possibly moving to widen the field in a player safety move, a’la the CFL’s wider field:

“I’ve got some plays if we ever go to a bigger field. The field (in the CFL) is a mile long and a mile wide, and obviously we’re playing with 12 (men) with multiple motion. It’s a different game but it’s a terribly exciting game, a great game, and it’s been around 100 years up there, so they must be doing something right.”

• Seen the outfit they’re making the combine participants wear this year for workouts? It’s an orange, black and yellow ensemble, with some black and orange camouflage elements to the shirt. It looks like a paint store exploded and there were no survivors on the dignity front.

And the socks. The socks are so multi-colored and hideously loud that even the Steelers refused to wear them as part of their throwback uniforms in 2013. It would seem the NFL’s new aptitude test is really a test of how its potential new players deal with the specter of public embarrassment and humiliation.

NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps  NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps  NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps  NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps  NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps

 NFL: Eagles far from giving up on Foles; more combine Day 1 Snaps

NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41-28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30-28

df56d1c54a5d81bce42a50762cda711c NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28
#12 of the greets Matt Schaub #8 of the Houston Texans after the 2013 AFC Divisional Playoffs game at on January 13, 2013 in Foxboro, Massachusetts.
(January 12, 2013 – Source: Elsa/Getty Images North America)

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — idolized as a kid in the Bay Area. Now, he’s surpassed his hero for postseason wins.

Brady got his 17th, the most for any quarterback, in New England’s 41-28 AFC divisional victory over Houston on Sunday. If Brady can lead the Patriots past Baltimore in next weekend’s conference , then win the Super Bowl, he’ll equal the 49ers’ for NFL championships.

Brady has guided the Patriots to five , winning the first three; Montana was 4 for 4 in the big game, playing for Brady’s .

“I grew up a 49ers fan,” Brady said. “Joe Montana and … those guys are in another class.”

Next up is Baltimore, which stunned top-seeded Denver in Saturday, and lost 23-20 at Gillette Stadium last January in the last step before the Super Bowl. But the Ravens beat the Patriots in Week 3 this season at Baltimore.

“I think the two best teams are in the final,” Brady said. “Baltimore certainly deserves to be here and so do we.”

Seldom-used Shane Vereen scored three times, twice on pinpoint throws from Brady, as New England (13-4) beat Houston (13-5) for the second time in a month.

Brady was missing some key helpers, but got the usual outstanding performance from Wes Welker, his favorite the last six years. The AFC’s top receiver with 118 catches this season, Welker looked like he might reach that total against Houston’s befuddled defense. He caught six in the first half for 120 yards, including a 47-yarder, and wound up with eight for 131.

And the AFC Patriots got more than anyone could have predicted from third-string running back Vereen, who scored their first two TDs on a 1-yard run and an 8-yard pass. He capped his biggest pro performance with an over-the-shoulder 33-yard catch early in the .

It was Brady’s 41st postseason TD pass, behind only (44) and, you guessed it, Montana (45).

“I hope I am around for a few more years,” the 35-year-old Brady said. “I love playing, I love competing …”

The boost from Vereen offset the loss of tight end Rob Gronkowski (arm) and RB Danny Woodhead (thumb) in the first quarter.

“Shane had a great game, just a huge growing up moment for him, very special,” Brady said. “There were a lot of guys who made a lot of plays.”

New England’s defense helped put away the Texans. Rob Ninkovich’s leaping third-quarter interception stopped a drive, and six plays later, Brady hit Brandon Lloyd for a 6-yard score.

Although the Texans got two fourth-quarter TDs on passes by Matt Schaub, their season ended with four defeats in their last six . That slump cost the AFC South champions the top seed in the playoffs, forcing a trip to New England after they beat Cincinnati in the wild-card round.

The Texans couldn’t measure up.

Unlike their 42-14 loss here a month ago, the Texans didn’t fold early. J.J. Watt, their dominating defensive end, bothered Brady, and when they fell behind 17-3, they had the fortitude to climb back.

Arian Foster did all the work after Danieal Manning’s second big kickoff return, this one a 35-yarder that had 15 yards tacked on when kicker Stephen Gostkowski brought down Manning with a horse-collar tackle. The Pro Bowl runner covered all 47 yards on a five-play drive and his 1-yard run — he barely squeezed into the end zone — made it 17-10.

Houston forced a three-and-out, and a short punt gave the Texans another shot just before halftime. They got close enough for Shayne Graham to kick a 55-yard field goal as the half ended.

But the Patriots pulled away in the third quarter for coach Bill Belichick’s 17th postseason win, third behind Tom Landry (20) and Don Shula (19).

Needing a quick jolt after being blown out by the Patriots on Dec. 10, the Texans got it on the opening kickoff from Manning. He took the ball 6 yards in his end zone and never hesitated in returning it. He broke free at the Houston 30 and wasn’t run down until reaching the New England 12.

That spark didn’t even last one play, though, and Houston wound up with Graham’s 27-yard field goal 63 seconds in.

And when the Texans closed the first half with a 10-point spurt, they wasted the momentum by allowing a quick touchdown drive to open the third period. Brady went to the familiar (Welker and tight end Aaron Hernandez) on that series before second-year back Stevan Ridley scored on an 8-yard burst.

New England lost Gronkowski and Woodhead almost immediately. Gronkowski missed five regular-season games with a broken left forearm, but returned for the finale. Eight Patriots plays on offense and he was gone again.

So Brady found other targets; he probably could complete passes to Belichick for big gains.

Vereen was an unlikely star. After gaining 400 yards overall during the season, he picked up 124 against the Texans. He had four touchdowns in the regular season.

NOTES: New England has played in eight AFC championship games, going 7-1, including 5-1 with Brady and Belichick. … Brady threw for 344 yards, and Schaub threw for 343. Schaub’s TD passes were 25 yards to DeVier Posey and 1 to Foster. … Foster had 90 yards rushing, the first time in four playoff games he did not reach 100. But his 515 tie for most in a player’s first four playoff games with Denver’s Terrell Davis.

bd71b9d99e0115ff0b44baa80a892bdb NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28
Matt Ryan #2 of the throws the ball against the Seattle Seahawks during the NFC Divisional Playoff Game at Georgia Dome on January 13, 2013 in Atlanta, Georgia.
(January 12, 2013 – Source: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images North America)

Bryant’s late FG lifts Falcons over Seattle 30-28

ATLANTA (AP) — The Atlanta Falcons called on a pair of Matty Ices to turn back the greatest fourth-quarter comeback in NFL playoff history.

After the top-seeded Falcons squandered a 20-point lead in the fourth quarter, Matt Ryan completed two long passes and Matt Bryant kicked a 49-yard field goal with 8 seconds to give Atlanta a stunning 30-28 victory over Russell Wilson and the gutty Seattle Seahawks in an NFC divisional playoff game Sunday.

The Falcons (14-3) overcame their reputation for choking in the playoffs, winning their first postseason game since 2004. They’ll host San Francisco in the next Sunday with a trip to the Super Bowl on the line.

Wilson threw two touchdown passes and ran for another, doing all he could to make the Seahawks (12-6) the first playoff team ever to rally from such a daunting deficit in the final period. Marshawn Lynch appeared to have locked it up for Seattle when he scored on a 2-yard run with 31 seconds left for a 28-27 lead.

But the Seahawks’ defense, which is one of the NFL’s best and had totally stymied the Falcons in the fourth, went to a softer coverage and got burned. The Falcons had just enough time to pull off a comeback of their own.

Ryan, shaking off the struggles in his first three playoff appearances, hooked up with Harry Douglas on a 29-yard pass in front of the Falcons bench, and coach Mike Smith quickly signaled a timeout. Then, Ryan went down the middle to his favorite target, tight end Tony Gonzalez, a Hall of Famer-to-be playing what could’ve been his final game.

Gonzalez hauled in the 19-yard throw, and Smith called his final timeout with 13 seconds remaining. Instead of risking another play and having the clock run out, he sent Bryant in for the field goal try.

The Seahawks called time just before the ball was snapped, and Bryant’s kick sailed right of the upright. That turned out to be nothing more than practice. The next one was right down the middle, giving the Falcons a stunning victory. Bryant took off toward the Falcons logo in the middle of the field, pumping his right fist before he was mobbed by his teammates.

“Wow,” Smith said.

Wilson finished with 385 yards passing and did all he could to lead the Seahawks back from a 27-7 deficit entering the final quarter. When Lynch powered over, the ball breaking the goal line just before it squirted from his arms, Seattle celebrated like it had won its second straight playoff game on the road, having already taken care of Robert Griffiin III and the Washington Redskins.

Not so fast.

Ryan and Bryant led the Falcons back.

“Our quarterback is a special player,” Smith said. “They call him Matty Ice, but I feel like we’ve got two Matty Ices. There’s Matty Ice Ryan and Matty Ice Bryant.”

Wilson’s last throw, a desperation heave into the end zone, was intercepted by Falcons receiver Julio Jones.

Gonzalez, who had never won a playoff game in his 16-year career, broke down in tears after Bryant’s kick went through the uprights.

“I’ve never cried after a win,” said Gonzalez, who has stated repeatedly that he’s “95 percent” sure this is his final year. “I was thinking, ‘Here we go again. I guess it wasn’t meant to be.’”

It was.

The Falcons won the first playoff game of the Ryan era, having gone one-and-done in his previous appearances to give the team — and its quarterback — a reputation for excelling in the regular season but choking in the postseason. Not anymore. Atlanta is one win away from the second Super Bowl appearance in franchise history.

Ryan threw three touchdown passes and overcame two interceptions, finishing 24 of 35 for a personal-best 250 yards in the postseason. He threw a 1-yard touchdown pass to Gonzalez, a 47-yarder to Roddy White and a 5-yarder to Snelling, the latter with 2:11 left in the third quarter to give the Falcons a seemingly commanding lead.

No team had ever rallied from a 20-point deficit in the fourth quarter of a playoff game. Wilson nearly pulled it off, running 1 yard for a touchdown to make it 27-14, then going to Zach Miller on a 3-yard touchdown pass that closed the gap to 27-21.

Finally, taking over at his own 39 after an Atlanta punt, Wilson completed three passes for 50 yards, the last of them a short throw to Lynch that went all the way to the Falcons 3 after the quarterback spun away from rushing Atlanta Sean Weatherspoon.

The Seahawks, though, will spend the offseason kicking themselves for that last Falcons’ drive, and for squandering two scoring chances in the first half.

On fourth-and-1 at the Atlanta 11, Seattle passed on a field goal and a chance to give the ball to Lynch, their beast of a back. Fullback Michael Robinson took the handoff and was stuffed for a 1-yard loss by safety William Moore.

Then, with the clock winding down before halftime, Seattle used up all its timeouts and wound up regretting it when Wilson was sacked by Jonathan Babineaux at the Atlanta 20. Time ran out before the Seahawks could get off another play, sending Atlanta to the locker room with a 20-0 lead.

Bryant also connected on field goals of 37 and 39 yards in the first half.

NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41-28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30-28 is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28  NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28  NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28  NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28  NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28

 NFL Playoffs: Patriots beat Texans 41 28 / Falcons late second FG beats Seahawks 30 28

Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve

09c5595cb0080cdf5244304ce1c0fab8 Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve
Jonathan Vilma of the Saints watches on from the sidelines during their game against the Carolina Panthers at Stadium on September 16, 2012 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
(September 15, 2012 – Source: / )

NEW YORK (AP) — The NFL presented Jonathan Vilma and his attorney with a from former Saints defensive coordinator saying the placed a $10,000 bounty on .

Vilma met with Commissioner Roger Goodell on Monday in New York about his suspension, which has been temporarily lifted. Attorney Peter said they were given an at the meeting.

“What Gregg Williams said in his most recent affidavit is the same he has previously provided,” Ginsberg said.

“I don’t know what Gregg Williams’ motives are, but I do know that any suggestion by Williams that Jonathan put up $10,000 as an incentive for his teammates to injure another player is absolutely false.”

Vilma tweeted on Monday night that Williams was “bullied to sign the affidavit,” saying Williams signed it on Friday.

Williams is now with St. Louis, though he has been suspended indefinitely. An associate of his said Williams did not want to talk to the media.

Vilma, who denied in court that he offered money in exchange for injuring the former Vikings quarterback, was one of four players suspended by Goodell in the bounty scandal.

“Today everyone was afforded an opportunity to start over,” Vilma said outside the NFL’ Avenue offices more than three hours after he went in. “It was in our best interest to meet today. We spoke truthfully, honestly, bluntly.”

An appeals panel earlier this month said Goodell must clarify his rulings to ensure no part of his decisions was based on salary cap violations. That would be the jurisdiction of special master Stephen Burbank.

Goodell must show that the basis for the discipline was inappropriate conduct – such as intent to injure – rather than any secret monetary compensation. In that case, he has full authority to impose the suspensions.

Players and coaches implicated in the bounty pool have testified under oath in a related federal court case they never intended to injure opposing players.

New Orleans defensive end Will Smith (four ), Browns Scott Fujita (three) and free agent defensive end (eight) are expected to have their meeting Tuesday.

“We appreciate Jonathan Vilma taking the time to meet today and look forward to seeing the other players tomorrow,” NFL Greg Aiello said.

Smith played in each of the Saints’ first two games and Vilma is on the physically unable to perform list. Fujita made his season debut in Cleveland’s loss to Cincinnati on Sunday. Hargrove was cut by Green Bay during the preseason.

Vilma, initially suspended for the entire season, requested a separate meeting. He hasn’t played because he is on the physically unable to perform list as he rehabilitates following offseason surgery on his left knee.

Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve
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1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve
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7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve
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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Saints Bounty Scandal: Williams affidavit; Vilma offered teammates $10K to injure Farve

Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half

9b08f42a3de879a864b9f6078b55f289 Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half

(PhatzRadio / ) — Jonathan Vilma might be on the field this season after all.

The is offering to cut the season-long suspension levied to the middle down to eight , per an ESPN report.

The catch? Vilma must agree to drop his lawsuit against .

ESPN’s sources claim that the league, players union and lawyers have had “ongoing settlement talks” which could also lighten the suspensions of New Orleans DE Will Smith (four games), DL (eight games) and OLB Scott Fujita (three games). The latter two also played for the Saints during the period (2009-11) when the team allegedly employed its pay-for-performance/.

Goodell reportedly would have been open to trimming the suspensions had the players actively participated in the league-overseen appeals process. However they chose to pursue outside that may ultimately bear fruit.

The suspended players had been seeking a in federal court in an effort to get back onto the field. Vilma is the only one currently banned. The suspensions for the other three players commence at the start of the regular season.

U.S. is scheduled to hear more arguments from both sides Friday.

Goodell originally suspended the players May 2, triggering a contentious discourse with the players and the union.

Vilma, who is accused of being a ringleader in the bounty program designed by former Saints Defensive Coordinator , purportedly offered a $10,000 bounty on Minnesota Vikings in the NFC Championship Game following the 2009 season.

Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half
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1df4af0e6e8f900d91267ca68edfd555 Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half
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7f14bbf0b0c13fca3af83ff82c0b71ca Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half
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7c7d24e16ce9807a51c9caae4d336d4f Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half
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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Report: NFL offers to cut Vilma’s suspension in half

Saints Bounty Scandal: ‘Overwhelming evidence’ shared with reporters in Saints case

c2a8b04e7e934e1fb128103c8169ccd8 Saints Bounty Scandal: ‘Overwhelming evidence’ shared with reporters in Saints case
Jonathan Vilma #51 of the talks with defensive coordinator in the first quarter against the at on December 19, 2009 in , Louisiana.
(December 18, 2009 – Source: Chris Graythen/ )

(PhatzRadio / SI – Peter King) — NEW YORK — As , the who examined the evidence for the in its pay-for-performance/bounty case against the , went through reams of evidence Monday afternoon for 12 reporters in league offices, I had one overriding thought: All of this cannot be invented.

• The testimony from disgraced defensive coordinator Gregg Williams to the league, in which he said he knew the program “was rolling the dice with and someone could have been maimed.”

• The charge, from what the league said was a handwritten note from a Saints , that the defense pledged $35,000 for a defender to knock out of the January 2010 NFC Championship Game — including a $5,000 pledge to the kitty from current Saints Joe Vitt. (Vitt denies the charge.)

• The three sources the NFL claims to have who told league investigators Jonathan Vilma spurred the bounty on Favre by offering $10,000 himself during a night-before-the-game motivational speech by, as one of the sources said, “raising his hands, each of which held stacks of bills, that he had two ‘five-stacks,”’ to give to the player who knocked Favre from the game.

• The NFL Films-recorded quote from defensive lineman Anthony Hargrove, as first reported by SI in March, with Hargrove saying to defensive teammate Bobby McCray, “Give me my money,” after Vitt told the team that Favre was out of the game with a leg injury. (Favre did return to the game without missing a play, but that wasn’t apparent when Hargrove made his declaration to McCray.)

• The PowerPoint slide collected from a sweep of the Saints’ computer system, from the night before the Saints’ playoff loss at Seattle in January 2011, complete with a picture of TV bounty hunter Duane “Dog” Chapman, that said, “Now is the time to do our job … collect bounty $$$! No apologies! Let’s go hunting!”

• The unending stream of evidence from Saints computers, which is going to create some very strange bedfellows inside the Saints’ football facility … seeing that the two-year sweep of the all Saints’ e-mails and computer-generated PowerPoints was OK’d by owner Tom Benson, who helped seal the case against the four suspended players and three coaches and general manager Mickey Loomis by allowing forensics experts to search for incriminating electronic evidence against his employees.

• The ledger sheet from an October 2009 game that showed safety Roman Harper due $1,000 for a “cart-off” of Giants running back Brandon Jacobs in the second quarter, forcing Jacobs to leave the field for several plays.

“Overwhelming evidence,” White called what the league showed reporters in a 75-minute presentation.

Specious evidence, the attorney for Vilma said in the morning, when lawyer Peter Ginsberg and Vilma walked out of the proceedings. “There is no evidence, because there was no bounty system,” he said.

Vilma, in a statement to reporters outside the league’s midtown Manhattan offices on Park Avenue, said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell in three months had destroyed the reputation he’d worked for eight years in the NFL to build. And Vilma criticized the process, in which the man who handed down the Saints’ suspensions, Goodell, was also the one hearing the appeals. “I don’t know how you have a fair process when you’re a judge, jury and executioner,” he said.

Summing up the day: The four players — Vilma, linebacker Scott Fujita (now with Cleveland), defensive end Will Smith and Hargrove (now with Green Bay) — due to have their appeals heard at NFL headquarters left in the morning because of a procedural issue. They felt they hadn’t had the 72 hours the Collective Bargaining Agreement mandated to examine the evidence in the case, and the NFL offered to adjourn the case till the afternoon, by which time the 72-hour window would be valid. Vilma and Ginsberg chose to leave and not return, protesting the forum. Fujita, Smith and Hargrove returned for the afternoon session, just long enough to hear White’s case against them. Then they left, apparently because they considered the probe unfair.

To be fair to the players, there was far, far more evidence of the pay-for-performance claims than the bounty claims. In fact, the Harper claim was the only one the league showed that resulted in a payout to a player for knocking a player out of a game.

However, the NFL has maintained all along that all it needs is evidence that a was in place and that money was offered to try to take opponents out of the game — not that players were actually taken out of the game.

(The NFL said what the reporters heard from security chief Jeff Miller, legal counsel Jeff Pash and White was the same as the three players, not including Vilma, heard from the three NFL representatives earlier in the afternoon.)

Pash said the league wouldn’t rule on the appeals immediately — a full year suspension for Vilma, eight for Hargrove, four for Smith and three for Fujita. He said Goodell will keep the case open for the remainder of the week in the hope that the players will make statements in their defense before he renders his decision.

Fujita was emotional as he spoke on a public plaza outside league offices. “I have yet to see anything that implicates me in some pay-to-injure scheme, not in the last three months, not in the last three days, not today,” Fujita said, a couple of times pausing to compose himself. “And perhaps that’s because there is nothing that can implicate me in some pay-to-injure scheme.”

In fact, there was no evidence presented to reporters that showed Fujita directly contributed money to a pool for distribution to players who hurt someone. Fujita told SI in March that he did contribute to the pay-for-performance system (for plays like interceptions and forced fumbles) but never to a pool for injurious hits. Apparently, when Goodell ruled, he took into account that Fujita was not the ringleader but, in the commissioner’s mind, a major contributor to the program.

“Throughout this process,” Fujita said, “it has become increasingly clear to me that just because someone disagrees with the NFL’s interpretation of an incredibly flawed investigation it’s assumed that he’s lying and to me and that’s a shame. I’ve played 10 years in this league and throughout my career I’ve done nothing but conduct myself in a positive manner. This has impacted my reputation, this has impacted my ability to provide for my family now and in the future and I have a hard time with that. The NFL has been careless and irresponsible and they have made mistakes. At some point they have to answer questions.”

The league answered quite a few from reporters late in the afternoon in a conference room on the sixth floor of NFL headquarters. This was the first time since the story exploded on March 2 that the league opened up the investigation to reporters.

Miller said Benson “gave us his permission” to examine the Saints’ computer system to try to find evidence in the bounty case. White said there was a witness statement saying Vitt instructed Hargrove to lie about the existence of a pay-for-performance/bounty system if he was interviewed by NFL investigators after the game in which Favre was knocked around. Williams confirmed the story of Vitt asking Hargrove to lie. Vitt denied it. And league officials confirmed that players sometimes gave the money they’d earned from the program back, to increase the money in the kitty.

One of these times, the league claimed, Vilma gave the money back. In a 2009 game against Miami, Vilma, the league charged, earned $400 for two “whacks” — explosive hits on an offensive players — but had $200 subtracted for an “ME” (mental error). The league said Williams kept the money in a lock box in his office, and he’d distribute it the following week to players in envelopes. In this case, the envelope with the $200 profit to Vilma for the week was returned. “Gave back to kitty pool,” the envelope containing the $200 read, according to the league.

There’s little doubt the aggrieved players will find a way to take action against the league for the sanctions. But now that the league has shared its case with the press — and, as a result, the public — it’s not quite the slam-dunk case of negligence the players have charged. Either way, this is a black eye that won’t soon go away, and league officials seemed to take little joy in smearing such a charismatic franchise in a Manhattan boardroom at the start of a long, hot Monday.

“Does anyone think this is how we wanted to spend the offseason?” Pash said, “taking one of the great stories of the NFL, the New Orleans Saints, where we’re playing the Super Bowl this year, and having it dominate the headlines?”

No. But it is.

Saints Bounty Scandal: ‘Overwhelming evidence’ shared with reporters in Saints case is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Saints Bounty Scandal: ‘Overwhelming evidence’ shared with reporters in Saints case

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Saints Bounty Scandal: ‘Overwhelming evidence’ shared with reporters in Saints case

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Saints Bounty Scandal: ‘Overwhelming evidence’ shared with reporters in Saints case

Breaking News: NFL suspends 4 players for Saints’ bounties

967f7a19b38554aa8a77b89acd471e60 Breaking News: NFL suspends 4 players for Saints’ bounties
Roman Harper #41, #33 and #51 of the New Orleans Saints celebrate breaking up a third down pass during the third quarter of the NFC against the San Francisco 49ers at on January 14, 2012 in San Francisco, California.
(January 13, 2012 – Source: Ezra Shaw/ North America)

(PhatzRadio / AP) — New Orleans Saints Jonathan Vilma was suspended without pay for the entire 2012 season by the NFL, one of four players punished Wednesday for participating in the team’s cash-for-hits bounty system.

Defensive lineman Anthony Hargrove, now with the Green Bay Packers, was suspended for the first half of this season; Saints defensive end Will Smith was barred for the opening four ; and linebacker Scott Fujita, now with the , will miss the first three games. All of the suspensions are without pay.

All four players have three days to appeal ’s ruling.

An NFL investigation determined that the Saints had a bounty system from 2009-11 that offered thousands of dollars to players for big hits that knocked opponents out of games. In March, Goodell suspended Saints head for all of next season, and levied other penalties against the club.

But no players were punished until Wednesday. Originally, the league said that 22 to 27 defensive players were involved in the illegal scheme, which was orchestrated by then-Saints Gregg Williams and started in the season New Orleans won its only Super Bowl championship.

Targeted opponents included quarterbacks , , and Kurt Warner. “” were worth $1,500 and “cart-offs” $1,000, with payments doubled or tripled for the playoffs.

“In assessing player discipline, 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,” Goodell said in a statement.

According to the league, Saints defensive captain Vilma offered $10,000 in cash to any player who knocked then-Cardinals QB Warner out of a playoff game at the end of the 2009 season, and the same amount for knocking then-Vikings QB Favre out of that season’s NFC championship game. The Saints were flagged for roughing Favre twice in that game, and the league later said they should have received another penalty for a brutal high-low hit from Remi Ayodele and Bobby McCray that hurt Favre’s ankle. He was able to finish the game, but the Saints won in overtime en route to the NFL title.

According to the NFL, Fujita “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.”

Hargrove “actively participated in the program while a member of the Saints,” the league said, adding that he “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 NFL said that “multiple independent sources” said Smith “pledged significant sums to the program pool.”

In March, Goodell made Payton the first suspended by the league for any reason, accused of trying to cover up the system of extra cash payouts. Goodell also indefinitely banned Williams, who was hired in January to run the St. Louis Rams’ defense.

In addition, Goodell suspended Saints general manager Mickey Loomis for the first eight regular-season games next season and assistant coach Joe Vitt for the first six games. The Saints were fined $500,000 and lost two second-round .

Fujita, Hargrove, and Smith are allowed to participate in offseason activity, including preseason games, before their suspensions take effect. Vilma, though, is suspended immediately and will be reinstated after the coming season’s Super Bowl — which, coincidentally, will be played in New Orleans.

Breaking News: NFL suspends 4 players for Saints’ bounties is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Breaking News: NFL suspends 4 players for Saints’ bounties

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009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e Breaking News: NFL suspends 4 players for Saints’ bounties
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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Breaking News: NFL suspends 4 players for Saints’ bounties

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Breaking News: NFL suspends 4 players for Saints’ bounties

NFL, NFLPA meet on Saints bounty issue; Goodell OK with Parcells

9d26b928c698077e58f7b3b3fec5f6bb NFL, NFLPA meet on Saints bounty issue; Goodell OK with Parcells
has asked to verify they don’t have a after the were punished. (Larry W. Smith / European Pressphoto Agency)

NEW YORK (AP) — Commissioner Roger Goodell says he won’t stand in the way if the Saints ask Bill Parcells to take over as for suspended Sean Payton.

“That’s their decision. They need to make those decisions and we’ll move forward,” Goodell said Monday at the opening of an NFL pop-up store featuring new team apparel. “Bill’s a great coach, and I’m sure (he) will add a lot of personality and intrigue. And he’s as competitive as they get so I’m sure he’ll do a good job.”

Before the Saints pick someone to run the team this year, though, Goodell still has to rule on Payton’s appeal of his season-long suspension, along with the appeals of shorter suspensions to assistant coach and general manager Mickey Loomis and penalties handed down to the team.

Goodell expects to hear the appeals this week, and hopes to making a ruling shortly thereafter.

“Part of it depends exactly when the appeal is going to be, and second of all what information comes up in the appeal,” said Goodell, who has met with Payton twice before the appeal was filed.

Meanwhile, league officials were meeting with NFL Players’ Association representatives Monday about penalties involving players who took part in the .

The union has asked the NFL to provide it with all the information from the league’s investigation that revealed 22 to 27 defensive players were part of the Saints’ pay-for-pain bounty pool. The pool awarded thousands of dollars in cash bonuses from 2009-11 for vicious hits that knocked targeted opponents out of games.

One example, according to the league: Linebacker offered $10,000 to any New Orleans player who sidelined Minnesota Vikings during the 2010 .

“Our team will meet with the NFL today, ask hard questions and will expect to see all documents and direct evidence of a pay-to-injure scheme,” DeMaurice Smith, executive director of the , told the website Pro Player Insiders on Monday. “That is what a fair process dictates. I will get a full briefing by our team and after that the next step will be to consult with players about what was learned. Only then will we confer with the NFL. ”

Goodell said the league has given the NFLPA two confidential reports on the investigation.

“I think we all need to move forward,” he said. “We’ve been open about what we’ve been able to find. We released it publicly.”

The commissioner said he’s hopeful the NFLPA will have a recommendation soon after meeting with league officials.

The results of the appeal could well affect whether Parcells comes out of retirement to take over as interim coach while his former offensive assistant and protege is suspended.

Parcells has said he would consider coaching the Saints if asked. Payton and Loomis played golf with the coach last week to talk to him about the team’s predicament.

Parcells, who turns 71 in August, led the New York Giants to two Super Bowl titles, and also coached the New England Patriots, New York Jets and Dallas Cowboys.

There has been criticism of Goodell for allowing Payton to participate in picking his successor, but the commissioner says the decision rests with Saints owner Tom Benson.

“These are management decisions that Tom Benson will have to sign off on,” Goodell said. “He will get recommendations, I’m sure from Sean and Mickey and others, and make his determination. If it ends up being Parcells, then they’ve gone through the full process.”

On Sunday, the NFLPA told players involved in the bounty case that there’s a chance they could face criminal charges and it hired outside counsel to represent them if needed.

Asked about possible criminal charges, Goodell said, “Those aren’t my decisions.”

“To me, we’re going to do what’s right,” he said. “We’re going to make sure our rules are enforced. And when they’re violated we’ll take the appropriate discipline.”

On March 21, Goodell suspended Payton for all of the upcoming season, Loomis for eight games, Vitt for six games, and former indefinitely, a penalty that will last at least one season. Goodell also fined the Saints $500,000 and took away second-round in 2012 and 2013.

Williams, who left the Saints after last season to join the St. Louis Rams, ran the bounty program.

It’s still unclear whether the appeals will change anything, but Goodell said Monday he’s open to new evidence. He noted, though, that the investigation has lasted years, in large part because the Saints didn’t come clean when first asked about the bounties.

“We’ve met with various personnel in the Saints, and for three years they denied that this was going on,” Goodell said. “It’s clear it was going on, and that’s one of the reasons the punishment was harsh. … They denied it repeatedly. And eventually we were able to get a credible source that came up late last year that gave us information that indicated clearly that it was going on.”

Even then, Goodell said, the Saints still denied it.

“We want to hear if there’s information we’re not aware of,” he said. “We’ll take that into consideration and we’ll deal with it from there.”

NFL, NFLPA meet on Saints bounty issue; Goodell OK with Parcells is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL, NFLPA meet on Saints bounty issue; Goodell OK with Parcells

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009b06f38695de0d0d383c24bf894a9e NFL, NFLPA meet on Saints bounty issue; Goodell OK with Parcells
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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 NFL, NFLPA meet on Saints bounty issue; Goodell OK with Parcells

325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 NFL, NFLPA meet on Saints bounty issue; Goodell OK with Parcells

Source: NFLPA hires lawyer for Saints players in bounty scandal

5895db12508416a4fac04cae255040ab Source: NFLPA hires lawyer for Saints players in bounty scandal
addresses the media during a news conference ahead of Superbowl XLVI on February 3, 2012 in Indianapolis, Indiana.
(February 2, 2012 – by / )

(PhatzRadio / SI) — The told players involved in the ’ bounty case that there is a chance they could face criminal charges and it hired outside counsel to represent them if needed.

While weighs how to punish the two dozen or so players the league says might be connected to the bounties, the also suggested that players have a lawyer and union representative present when they are interviewed by investigators.

The union plans to head to New York this week to meet with league security staff and review additional evidence, taking up the NFL on an offer it made more than once.

The latest steps were described to The on Sunday by two people familiar with the case. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.

The NFL has said that 22 to 27 defensive players were part of the Saints’ pay-for-pain bounty pool, which awarded thousands of dollars of cash bonuses from 2009-11 for vicious hits that knocked targeted opponents out of . One example, according to the league: Jonathan Vilma offered $10,000 to any New Orleans player who sidelined during the 2010 .

On March 21, Goodell suspended Saints for all of next season, general manager Mickey Loomis for eight games, assistant coach Joe Vitt for six games, and former defensive coordinator Gregg Williams for at least one season. Goodell also fined the Saints $500,000 and took away two second-round draft picks.

The appeals process is expected to begin this week.

When those punishments were announced, Goodell said he would wait for NFLPA input before determining how to discipline players who participated in the bounties.

“While I will not address player conduct at this time, I am profoundly troubled by the fact that players – including leaders among the defensive players – embraced this program so enthusiastically and participated with what appears to have been a deliberate lack of concern for the well-being of their fellow players,” Goodell said.

The NFL has asked the union for contact information for players. The NFLPA, meanwhile, was told by the league it could try to speak to Payton, Loomis, Vitt and Williams.

The league has not given any timetable for when Goodell will decide on penalties for the players, creating uncertainty for the Saints – as well as other teams who might now have any of the players involved.

Gabe Feldman, a law professor and director of the Tulane Sports Law Program, said shortly after the NFL made its investigation public that he didn’t expect any criminal or civil legal action specifically tied to the bounties.

“They’re difficult cases to bring, because it’s hard to prove the injury was caused by a tackle with specific intent to injure, rather than a regular tackle,” Feldman explained at the time. “We all know injuries are a part of football. There can’t be legal liability anytime there is an injury. Otherwise, you can’t have football.”

Source: NFLPA hires lawyer for Saints players in bounty scandal is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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325472601571f31e1bf00674c368d335 Source: NFLPA hires lawyer for Saints players in bounty scandal

New Orleans case puts scrutiny on NFL bounty pay

ca4d201258163c8bfbc0743e5756adc6 New Orleans case puts scrutiny on NFL bounty pay
Head talks with Defensive Coodinator of the during practice at the training facility on August 5, 2011 in Metairie, Louisiana.
(August 4, 2011 – Photo by Chris Graythen/ North America)

(PhatzRadio / SI) — The revelations were shocking and appalling to those outside the : A team paid bounties to knock opponents out of the game, including some of football’s biggest stars.

For those who suit up, however, it sounded more like the long-accepted cost of doing business in a brutal sport, a dirty little secret that everyone kept on the down low.

star Roddy White called it a “league thing” that goes far beyond the New Orleans Saints. Shawne Merriman of the wondered what all the fuss was about, having long maintained he was targeted and sustained a career-altering injury. Former All-Pro guard Alan Faneca said he wasn’t surprised at all that a sordid system had finally been exposed.

“It’s a violent game we play. Whether people want to think about it or not, part of the game is to exert physical dominance over your opponent,” Faneca, who retired after the 2010 season, told The on Saturday. “If it results in a guy not finishing the game, then that’s what happened in the course of playing the game.”

player Matt Bowen was the bluntest one of all.

“Bounties, cheap shots, whatever you want to call them, they are a part of this game,” Bowen wrote Saturday in a column in the Chicago Tribune.

The NFL said Friday that Saints players and at least one maintained a bounty pool of up to $50,000 the last three seasons to reward game-ending injuries inflicted on opposing players, including star quarterbacks and Kurt Warner.

“Knockouts” were worth $1,500 and “cart-offs” $1,000, with payments doubled or tripled for the playoffs. According to the NFL, the pool amounts reached their height in 2009, the year the Saints won the Super Bowl.

The NFL investigation, by its own security department, delivered a blow to a league that has placed increased emphasis on safety, especially concerning concussions and dirty hits.

But as objectionable as many find the activity, is it a crime?

There was no immediate sign that prosecutors would investigate. The NFL has yet to hand out punishments, which could include suspensions, fines and loss of .

“I haven’t studied the issue yet and it’s not before us,” said Leon Cannizzaro, the district attorney of Orleans Parish in New Orleans.

Another government agency to keep an eye on: the Internal Revenue Service, which might view bounties as extra income that wasn’t reported on tax returns.

Asked whether there is a culture of “bounties” that goes beyond the Saints, NFL Greg Aiello said: “If we find other violations of league rules, we will take action.” He declined to comment on whether other teams are being investigated.

If the news stunned NFL fans, it didn’t evoke the same reaction in seasoned players.

“It’s a league thing, but it’s about to end because of the Saints story,” White tweeted Saturday.

He also posted, “I got my own bounty on the Saints defense I want to kill them every year.”

The Falcons have a bitter rivalry with the Saints that dates to the 1960s, when they entered the league a year apart as expansion teams. They have long been in the same division, facing each other twice a season. When one of White’s Twitter followers asked if he knew how much the Saints might’ve paid to knock him out of a game, he replied, “At least a million dollars.”

Merriman, a three-time Pro Bowler, claims he was intentionally injured in 2007 while with the San Diego Chargers. in retaliation for hitting Tennessee quarterback Vince Young after a handoff. Merriman hasn’t been the same dominating player since the knee injury.

“Why is this a big deal now? Bounties been going on forever,” Merriman tweeted.

Former Saints defense coordinator Gregg Williams apologized and admitted overseeing the sordid program, which involved between 22 and 27 defensive players and, according to the NFL, was carried out with the knowledge of Sean Payton.

“It was a terrible mistake, and we knew it was wrong while we were doing it,” said Williams, who is now of the St. Louis Rams.

Bowen, who played strong safety in the NFL for seven years, said Williams had a similar during his tenure with the Washington Redskins.

“Prices were set on Saturday nights in the team hotel,” Bowen wrote in the Tribune. “In a makeshift meeting room, with the whisper of evening traffic pouring in from the Beltway, we laid our bounties on opposing players. We targeted big names, our sights set on taking them out of the game.”

From Bowen’s perspective, it was the price of doing business.

“It’s a fundamental part of the NFL’s culture that isn’t talked about outside of team facilities,” he wrote. “I’m not saying it’s right. Or ethical. But the NFL isn’t little league football with neighborhood dads playing head coach. This is the business of winning. If that means stepping over some line, you do it.”

This isn’t the first time the bounty business has surfaced in the NFL.

In 1989, then-Dallas coach Jimmy Johnson claimed that his Philadelphia counterpart, Buddy Ryan, took out a bounty on two Cowboys players. The game became known as the “Bounty Bowl.”

Ryan’s son, Rex, now coaches the New York Jets and said he has never ordered his players to take someone out.

“I’ve never condoned it and I’ve never coached it,” he said in a statement.

defensive end Lawrence Jackson took a similar stance.

“In every locker room, it’s posted clearly: No exceptions to the rule on bounties for hurting people,” he said at a sports conference in Boston Saturday. “I just don’t believe it’s right, on a human level.”

But another Lions player, tight end Tony Scheffler, conceded that all teams walk an ethical fine line.

“There is a lot of stuff that goes on over the course of the season,” he told the AP. “There might be something that happened in the first meeting between teams and that brings attention to a certain guy, who might’ve cheap-shotted a teammate, and then there’s an opportunity to get back at that guy.

“But as far as coaches putting a bounty on a guy, I’ve never seen it. I have heard of it. The nature of the game is so physical and a lot goes into game preparation each week and those game plans always include getting physical with the best players on the other team.”

Former Washington quarterback Joe Theismann said he’s surprised it took this long for such an ugly, widespread case to be revealed. He knows for sure bounties were put out on him when he played in the 1970s and `80s. His career ended on Nov. 18, 1985, when Lawrence Taylor broke Theismann’s leg in a gruesome sack that exposed his broken bone on “Monday Night Football”.

“In a sick way, I guess it’s flattering,” Theismann told the AP. “If you had a bounty on you, you were a pretty good player and they wanted to get rid of you.”

He said bounties are probably not as widespread as they once were, with the league’s increased emphasis on safety.

“It’s a violent game and this is part of the game that I’m sure the NFL doesn’t want fans to know of,” said retired offensive lineman Pete Kendall, who played in the league for 13 seasons. “But it shouldn’t stun anybody who spent any time working in that game.”

New Orleans case puts scrutiny on NFL bounty pay is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

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NFL: Scanning the field for Peyton Manning in 2012

e6e96c9c540d895825964cb97b8f660e NFL: Scanning the field for Peyton Manning in 2012
(L-R) Warren Moon and Archie Manning, player Peyton Manning and former player Joe Montana on the field during DIRECTV’s Sixth Annual Celebrity Beach Bowl Game at on February 4, 2012 in Indianapolis, Indiana.
(February 3, 2012 – Photo by Andrew H. Walker/ )

(PhatzRadio / USA Today) is in the books, but the circus remains in Indianapolis for the Colts — at least until Peyton Manning’s expected exit strategy plays out before the Andrew Luck era begins.

At least four teams are expected to gamble that the league’s only four- can rebound from career-threatening spinal-fusion surgery Sept. 8 to help them capture a Lombardi Trophy.

Manning revealed during Super Bowl week that he had been physically cleared by his surgeon, Sr., to resume his career.

MORE: Manning is NFL’s top offseason question
PHOTOS: Images from Peyton Manning’s career

According to former Colts general manager Bill Polian, now a SiriusXM NFL analyst, Manning has made steady progress in his throwing regimen, and Polian predicts Manning will play at a high level again.

Tom Brady said, “I’ve spoken to Peyton several times and know how disappointed he was to miss a season. But if anybody will get back, it will be him.”

Will Manning become a 2012 offseason version of , the former quarterback with the career-threatening shoulder injury whom the gambled on in March 2006? Four seasons later, Brees rewarded general manager Mickey Loomis and with a Lombardi Trophy.

Or will Manning be a 2012 version of Joe Montana in 1993 and in 2008, franchise icons forced by younger successors — and, in Favre’s case, unretirement — to play elsewhere? Montana and Favre failed to win another Super Bowl in subsequent acts.

Which team is best stocked to win the ultimate gamble on greatness by signing the most compelling potential free agent franchise transformer?

With Colts owner Jim Irsay expected to start over with Luck, the former Stanford quarterback and presumptive No. 1 overall draft pick in April, a mutual parting seems likely when Irsay and Manning meet, perhaps this week.

Manning has leverage before March 8, when a $28 million option bonus is due before the March 13 start of free agency.

The Arizona Cardinals are considered to be among Manning’s suitors; ex-Colts quarterbacks coach Frank Reich was hired last week as receivers coach. Star wideout Larry Fitzgerald would embrace Manning as a Kurt Warner successor.

But lavish free agent paydays aren’t the way of conservative owner Bill Bidwill and his son Michael, particularly since quarterback Kevin Kolb signed a six-year, $65 million deal last summer. In addition, third-year quarterback John Skelton is poised to push Kolb.

Consider the Manning five:

1. Miami Dolphins

The situation: Journeyman Matt Moore showed promise after replacing injured Chad Henne.

Why it would work: Owner Stephen Ross seeks a big-name fan magnet. The Dolphins have a decent line, stud wideout Brandon Marshall and tailback Reggie Bush, backed by a rising, young defense. Manning grew up a huge fan of Dan Marino. Who better to emerge as the heir the Dolphins have sought since Marino’s 1999 retirement, 16 starting quarterbacks ago?

Why it wouldn’t work: New coach Joe Philbin, formerly the Green Bay Packers offensive coordinator, would likely prefer Packers protégéMatt Flynn, who is a free agent. Though Manning and his wife, Ashley, own a South Florida condominium, Manning is not a South Beach spotlight-seeker. He sticks to his “Bat Cave,” the nickname for the workaholic-perfectionist’s basement film room where Manning relentlessly breaks down film of opponents.

2. Washington Redskins

The situation: To their way of thinking, the Redskins have been a quarterback away since Super Bowl XXVI MVP Mark Rypien left after the 1993 season. Coach Mike Shanahan hasn’t won a Super Bowl since former Denver Broncos quarterback John Elway retired in May 1999. Last season, Rex Grossman and John Beck combined for 24 interceptions (20 by Grossman in 13 starts).

Why it would work: Shanahan builds around a quarterback’s strengths. Remember Jake Plummer’s 2005 Pro Bowl season? Shanahan is a play-action running-game devotee and has stockpiled tailbacks Tim Hightower, Roy Helu and Evan Royster. Owner Daniel Snyder can atone for his biggest free agent fiasco, $100 million bust Albert Haynesworth, with one of the game’s greatest leaders.

Why it wouldn’t work: Manning might not want to face younger brother Eli twice a season in the ultracompetitive NFC East. The offensive line is patchwork, and there is no explosive receiver. With the sixth overall pick, Shanahan can get a younger, mobile quarterback such as Robert Griffin III or Ryan Tannehill to fit his bootleg-based system.

3. Seattle Seahawks

The situation: Inconsistent Tarvaris Jackson is the incumbent, with Charlie Whitehurst the backup.

Why it would work: Manning could consider the NFC West the path of least resistance to the Super Bowl by comparison to the NFC East and AFC East. Offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell worked with Favre with Green Bay and the Minnesota Vikings and would tailor the offense to Manning.

Why it wouldn’t work: Coach Pete Carroll and general manager John Schneider have gone young, so much so that Manning might feel more like he’s reliving his past with the University of Tennessee than his NFL prime with the Super Bowl-winning 2006 Colts.

4. New York Jets

The situation: Mark Sanchez regressed in his third season and vowed to mend his rift with wideout Santonio Holmes after the Jets missed the postseason.

Why it would work: Manning would provide coach Rex Ryan the proven quarterback to steal the tabloid back pages away from the New York Giants and deliver on his Super Bowl-winning guarantee 3.0. Manning’s former Colts coordinator Tom Moore is a consultant, and the Jets have a decent offensive line, good weapons and strong defense.

Why it wouldn’t work: The Jets would be giving up on a young quarterback, trying to capture aging lightning for the second time since 2008. They gambled on Favre before the 2008 season, after the Giants won a Super Bowl. Favre tore his biceps tendon in Week 11, and the Jets missed the playoffs at 9-7.

5. Colts

The situation: Kerry Collins (retired), Dan Orlovsky and Curtis Painter couldn’t fill Manning’s void. Bruce Arians is the new offensive coordinator. He served as Manning’s 1998-2000 Colts quarterbacks coach.

Why it would work: If Manning is on his way to regaining full nerve regeneration in his throwing arm, why let arguably the best player of his generation try to win a second Super Bowl elsewhere? What better quarterback for Luck to learn from?

Why it wouldn’t work: Luck is considered by many analysts a younger Manning. The Colts could risk losing Luck in an Eli Manning-esque, draft-day-trade-forcing strategy if they keep Peyton. New general manager Ryan Grigson is in rebuild mode, looking to become less quarterback-centric and more physical to compete with the AFC South division champion Houston Texans.

The Colts can get Luck for four years and $23 million, given more favorable salary-cap economics for top draft picks as stipulated by the new collective bargaining agreement. If Manning stays, Irsay would commit an estimated $51 million to one position, tantamount to salary-cap suicide.

NFL: Scanning the field for Peyton Manning in 2012 is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: Scanning the field for Peyton Manning in 2012

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