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NFL commissioner Tagliabue retiring

buckeyefool

He's back and better than ever!
  • NFL Commish to retire

    this is under breaking news on cbs.sportsline no story with it yet

    <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR class=breakingNewsBg vAlign=top><TD width=5 rowSpan=3>
    </TD><TD class=cbreaklbl>BREAKING NEWS</TD></TR><TR class=breakingNewsBg vAlign=top><TD class=cbreakhdl>NFL commish to retire in July</TD></TR><TR class=breakingNewsBg vAlign=top><TD class=cbreaktxt>Paul Tagliabue has presided over his final NFL season. The NFL commissioner is retiring after 16 years</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
     
    this is under breaking news on cbs.sportsline no story with it yet

    <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR class=breakingNewsBg vAlign=top><TD width=5 rowSpan=3>

    </TD><TD class=cbreaklbl>BREAKING NEWS</TD></TR><TR class=breakingNewsBg vAlign=top><TD class=cbreakhdl>NFL commish to retire in July</TD></TR><TR class=breakingNewsBg vAlign=top><TD class=cbreaktxt>Paul Tagliabue has presided over his final NFL season. The NFL commissioner is retiring after 16 years</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

    There is now a short story on it...he is retiring in July. This has been in the works for a while...he didn't want to leave the new guy without a CBA, so now that the CBA is ratified, he can retire.
     
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    Can't say this surprises me much. The retirement talks have been swirling for a few months now. Overall I think Tags did a good job during his tenure.

    Now if baseball could get rid of Selig and basketball got rid of Stern, those sports might be worth watching again.
     
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    I actually think Stern has done a good job with the NBA-he has a much tougher group to control,IMO.
    The NFL has only had 2 commissioners in the last 40 years-whoever steps into the job is going to have some big shoes to fill. I wonder if Condoleeza Rice is serious about wanting the job:biggrin: . Who are some likely candidates to fill the job-I have no idea.
     
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    I actually think Stern has done a good job with the NBA-he has a much tougher group to control,IMO.
    The NFL has only had 2 commissioners in the last 40 years-whoever steps into the job is going to have some big shoes to fill. I wonder if Condoleeza Rice is serious about wanting the job:biggrin: . Who are some likely candidates to fill the job-I have no idea.

    I agree with you that Stern has the toughest group to work with. I guess my biggest gripe with Stern is that the overall quality of the game had declined during his tenure. (Some of this is his fault, some he has no control over.) The NBA can hardly be considered basketball anymore. Fundamentals are at an all-time low, Defense is virtually non-existent, they change the rules to cater to the game's best player's strengths...... Basically, they've created a game that is very difficult for me to watch.

    As far as replacements for Tagliabue, I don't have a clue. You're right though; whoever it is will have some enormous shoes to fill.
     
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    If she can deal w/ Iraqi warlords, Jacques Chirac and his ego, Kim jong Il and slippery Mexican presidents, Drew Rosenhaus, Randy Moss, Dan Snyder and the Poston Bros. will be a walk in the park.
    How those situations are dealt with would make for good political board fodder:wink2: . I hope I am wrong but I believe my Atlanta Falcons may be losing their GM Rich McKay to the commish job. He was rumored to be next in line, but stated before he wanted to get the Falcons right before thinking about that job. It will be interesting.
     
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    Why not give this guy a shot?

    jeopardy%20winner.jpg
     
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    DENVER -- The search for the replacement of commissioner Paul Tagliabue is only two months old. The wait for an NFL franchise in the Los Angeles area is in its 12th year.

    NFL owners held an all-day meeting Tuesday to escalate both priorities, but no one can estimate how long each process will take. One thing is clear, though: Tagliabue has a better chance of being replaced before a decision is made on whether to settle on the Los Angeles Coliseum or Anaheim as the site for a new Southern California stadium.

    The good news coming out of Tuesday's meeting is that the engines are moving to revolve both issues.

    The Los Angeles situation appeared to take up more of the discussion, and rightfully so. The issue is complex because of the massive costs of building a stadium, not to mention the cost of getting a team to Los Angeles and funding it with enough money to acquire winning players.

    Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt told Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and others that the Los Angeles project is the NFL's toughest challenge. From the ever-changing politics to the limited public contribution, NFL owners realize how difficult it will be to make the numbers work for a Los Angeles- or Anaheim-based owner.

    Houston Texans owner Bob McNair committed $900 million of capital for his franchise once he counted the money he contributed for Reliant Stadium, the expansion franchise and working capital for the team. Whomever owns a Southern California franchise probably needs to commit between $1 billion to $1.4 billion, or figure a different way to come up those types of resources.

    "The L.A. thing is hard to get your hands around," Jones said. "We don't have an owner. We don't have a team. We've got some leadership that we haven't had before. We've got a L.A. market that's better than it's been the last seven years. We got viability out there."

    Owners left Denver feeling months of exhaustive work is needed on the Los Angeles area football project. An 11-member committee is working feverishly. The working committee gave Tagliabue the authority to spend up to $5 million each on studying the Los Angeles Coliseum concept and the Anaheim stadium, which is near Angel Stadium.

    Eliminated from consideration at this time is the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, or any California site other than the Coliseum or Anaheim.

    To some degree, both Anaheim and the Los Angeles Coliseum might be disappointed that the NFL is probably months away from picking a site. Tagliabue said a couple more league meetings and lots of work by the Los Angeles Working Group -- the 11-member committee -- will be needed to study everything.

    Next month, several owners and league representatives will visit Los Angeles and Anaheim to talk to business leaders and to hope to figure out how to make the numbers work. One of the reasons the league is planning on spending close to $10 million for both sides is to find a way to bring down the overall cost.

    The Los Angeles Coliseum rebuild could cost as much as $800 million. The Anaheim stadium could cost in excess of $650 million, including $53 million for the land.

    "We need to be a lot more reliant on something called value engineering, and to understand what are the best ways of monitoring stadium construction costs," Tagliabue said. "We've got to work really hard on the costs. There is not money to be wasted there. I think the committee and I emphasized to the membership that we have to be looking in the analysis of each of the new stadiums to be looking for two teams."

    Two teams for either the Los Angeles Coliseum or Anaheim?

    That's right, two. Though no one is willing to even think about finding two Los Angeles-area teams for a league that doesn't want to expand beyond 32 teams -- leaving relocation as the method for getting a team to the area -- Tagliabue and the working committee understand this project is so complex, a two-team analysis has to be done to make the numbers work. Tagliabue mentioned Giants Stadium working for both the Jets and the Giants as the example of how the cost of building in such a big market has to be considered.

    "In New York, with the Jets and Giants having two teams playing the minimum of the 20 dates at the stadium with shared cost is an advantage," Tagliabue said.

    Whomever buys into the Los Angeles market knows he will be battling a tight margin of financial success. The numbers will be huge and are escalating every day.

    Jones and other owners understand that, which is why they are proceeding cautiously and diligently in finding a way to make it work. Jones remembers when he bought the Cowboys they were losing $1 million a month. He wasn't sure if he could make it work financially. Through hard work, he turned one of the NFL's brightest star franchises into a profit machine.

    The potential new owner in Los Angeles has to enter with similar uncertainty.

    "Every constituent involved has to be willing to overdo here and be willing to have an area where you don't have the answers," Jones said. "That's why I use the example of buying the Cowboys. When I bought them, I did not have all the answers. I thought I had all the answers. I thought I had a way to keep from going broke, but I wasn't sure. I don't know an owner who has come into this league knowing he's is going to come into this league thinking he's going to make money owning a football team."

    The effort will be in the next few months of trying to figure out the right ways to cut down the cost of building the stadium and finding people willing to invest private capital to make it all work. It won't be easy. Problems occur daily. On Tuesday, for example, the University of Southern California Trojans expressed concern about their status in a new stadium with an NFL team, causing Los Angeles Coliseum people to scramble to put out fires. A problem surfaces in Anaheim -- a city that wants a quick decision from the NFL -- that the city might be offering the land for an NFL stadium too cheaply at $53 million.

    The issue is complex, and the next few months will be adventurous in trying to reach a solution.

    As for Tagliabue, he figures to be around at least until Labor Day. A survey of the 32 owners' positions on what they want as far as qualifications for a new commissioner has been completed and read to the owners. Now, the owners and the eight-member search committee have their ground rules.

    Owners informed Tagliabue they plan to take the next three months to interview candidates and then try to find a voting consensus to replace him. A new commissioner needs the support of 22 owners instead of the usual 24 to pass a rule or a bylaw.

    Owners will meet Aug. 18 in Detroit and may vote on a new commissioner then, but some owners think the process could last into the fall or as late as December.

    Steelers owner Dan Rooney, who is leading the search committee, said he expects to have a list whittled down in about two months or sooner. The owners hope to meet in July in an attempt to make further progress.

    "We're going to try to get things done as quickly as possible," Rooney told The Associated Press.

    The leading candidates for Tagliabue's job continue to be Roger Goodell, the NFL's chief operating officer; Atlanta general manager Rich McKay and Baltimore president Dick Cass. One outside name that has cropped up recently has been Michael Powell, former chairman of the Federal Communication Commission and the son of Colin Powell, the former secretary of state.

    Also on the list are league officials Jeff Pash, Eric Grubman and Joe Browne, as well as several club officials and an unknown number of potential candidates from outside the NFL.

    The spring meeting allowed the NFL to spring forward on its two most important topics: Los Angeles and finding a new commissioner. By the fall, a new commissioner should be hired. As for Los Angeles, it's going to take time.

    John Clayton is a senior writer for ESPN.com. Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
     
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    Dispatch

    7/25/06

    NFL NOTEBOOK

    Commissioner field down to 11 candidates

    Tuesday, July 25, 2006


    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    <!--PHOTOS--><TABLE class=phototableright align=right border=0><!-- begin large ad code --><TBODY><TR><TD><TABLE align=center><TBODY></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>


    The list of candidates for Paul Tagliabue’s job as NFL commissioner is down to 11, although with two weeks to go until the final selection meeting, most of the owners still don’t know who is on it.
    The owners met for three hours at the Detroit airport in Romulus, Mich., yesterday to narrow the list of potential successors. Then the search committee continued discussing procedures for getting down to a workable number of finalists for the meetings in Chicago on Aug. 7-9 to choose Tagliabue’s successor.
    Despite the secrecy, the front-runner remains Roger Goodell, Tagliabue’s second in command. He appears to be one of three league-office people — the others are Jeff Pash, the league’s chief lawyer, and Eric Grubman, its top financial officer. The 11 candidates will meet with the search committee this week at an unspecified site.
     
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    ABJ

    7/31/06

    Nance, 4 others finalists for commissioner

    DAVE GOLDBERG

    Associated Press

    <!-- begin body-content -->NEW YORK - Roger Goodell first emerged as Paul Tagliabue's possible successor as NFL commissioner a few years ago.
    So, it was no surprise when the five finalists to succeed Tagliabue were announced Sunday and Goodell was still on the list.
    The other candidates include Gregg Levy, who holds the same job Tagliabue held when he became commissioner - the league's outside counsel; Frederick Nance, a lawyer who worked to bring the Browns back to the Cleveland and has represented Cavaliers star LeBron James; Robert L. Reynolds, of Concord, Mass., the vice chairman and chief operating officer of Fidelity Investments; and Mayo A. Shattuck III of Baltimore, chairman of the board, president and CEO of Constellation Energy.
    "They are five that any one of them could make, in my view, a great commissioner in the NFL," said Dallas owner Jerry Jones, a member of the eight-man selection committee. "We'll now really get down to it and figure out who the best man is to be the commissioner."
    The 47-year-old Goodell, who started as an intern in the NFL office in 1982, is the NFL's chief operating officer - the No. 2 job to Tagliabue. He has spent almost his entire career in the NFL and remains the clear favorite.
    Buffalo's Ralph Wilson, who has become the league's pre-eminent maverick, said a few weeks ago that he believed the entire selection process had been rigged in Goodell's favor. Wilson went so far as to complain that Goodell, who was born and raised in Jamestown, N.Y., less than an hour from Buffalo, had been there only once in the past five years.
    But the others have some powerful supporters and there are owners beside Wilson who aren't necessarily inclined to go for Goodell - at least on the first ballot at the meetings in Chicago from Aug. 7-9 that are expected to produce Tagliabue's successor.
    Reynolds, for example, was proposed by New England's Robert Kraft and presumably will be supported by him. Jones and Washington's Daniel Snyder, on the opposite end of the high-revenue/low-revenue from Wilson, have issues with the league office and may not support Goodell from the start.
    But it's also likely that none of the four other candidates will have anything near the 22 votes from 32 teams needed for election. If Goodell doesn't, he might have enough to get close on the first ballot. And Pittsburgh owner Dan Rooney and Tagliabue have said continually that they believe the commissioner will be chosen at the meeting next week, unlike in 1989, when the owners were deadlocked for three months between Tagliabue and the late Jim Finks, the general manager of the New Orleans Saints.
    Nobody is committing yet - at least publicly. "I just don't know," Jones said at the Cowboys' training camp in Oxnard, Calif.
    Other than Goodell, the son of a former U.S. senator, the other finalist with a direct NFL background is the 53-year-old Levy, a partner in the Washington law firm of Covington & Burling, which is what Tagliabue's job was when he was elected.
    He has been the lead counsel in several recent court cases, including the one involving Maurice Clarett, in which a decision to let the Ohio State running back enter the draft a year before league rules stipulated was overturned on appeal.
    Nance, 52, is managing partner of the Cleveland office of Squire Sanders & Dempsey. The only black finalist, he handled the negotiation for the city of Cleveland when the Browns returned to the NFL in 1999 and was the lawyer for the group that developed the construction of the new Browns stadium. A message seeking comment was left Sunday with Nance's staff.
    The 54-year-old Reynolds has been vice president of Fidelity's management trust company and held several executive jobs with the firm before that. He has been in his current job since 2000.
    The 51-year-old Shattuck, who began his career as an investment banker, worked at Bankers Trust as vice chairman and was chairman of the board at Deutsche Bank in Baltimore before becoming chairman of the board, president and CEO of Constellation Energy, which ranks 125th on the Fortune 500 list and owns energy-related businesses that had $17.1 billion in revenues in 2006.
    His wife, Molly, who is 39, made the Baltimore Ravens' cheerleading squad for the second straight year this season.
    The members of the selection committee are Rooney, Kraft, Jones, Carolina's Jerry Richardson, Woody Johnson of the New York Jets, Al Davis of Oakland, Kansas City's Lamar Hunt and Mike McCaskey of Chicago.
    The ages of the candidates all reflect the desire of the committee to hire a new commissioner who could serve for a length of time similar to Tagliabue's.
    ---
    AP Sports Writer Jaime Aron in Oxnard, Calif., contributed to this report.
    <!-- end body-content -->
     
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    ABJ

    8/8/06

    NFL owners hear from 5 finalists

    BARRY WILNER

    Associated Press

    <!-- begin body-content -->NORTHBROOK, Ill. - Paul Tagliabue cracking jokes? The search for a new NFL commissioner sure must be going well.
    Tagliabue was in a jovial mood Monday after the five finalists to replace him made presentations to the 32 owners. Tagliabue, who announced his retirement in March, is confident the process will conclude by Wednesday, and he can head off to the Far East on vacation.
    "I think it's been a very balanced and thoughtful and businesslike process, with not a lot of contention," Tagliabue said. "There were different points of view, nothing out of the ordinary."
    Tagliabue then noted that the order of interviews for Tuesday was selected out of an NFL helmet, not a fish bowl, as was previously done - a clear sign of progress. He also kidded about the new uniforms for game officials unveiled Sunday night in the Hall of Fame game as being Armani rejects.
    The final interviewing process was expected to take at least five hours Tuesday. The favorite to become the league's fourth commissioner since World War II is Roger Goodell, Tagliabue's main assistant. The other candidates are Gregg Levy, the league's outside counsel; Fred Nance, a Cleveland lawyer who helped broker the return of the Browns to that city in 1999; Robert L. Reynolds, vice chairman of Fidelity Investments; and Mayo O. Shattuck III, a financier who was involved in the sale of the Baltimore Ravens by Art Modell to Steve Bisciotti.
    At least 22 of the 32 owners must vote for a candidate for him to get the job.
    Each of the five contenders were to spend an hour with four groups of eight owners for in-depth interviews. Each of the eight groups will include two members of the search committee and will be composed of owners with various interests: AFC/NFC or high-revenue, low-revenue teams all will be included in each group.
    Tagliabue said he "wouldn't think I'd endorse" anyone.
    "I might express some opinions," he said. "We haven't reached that. If I'm asked to give my views on a certain question, I will."
    All five candidates addressed the owners and answered questions for about 45 minutes apiece. Several owners said they were impressed by all of the potential successors to Tagliabue, and the commissioner said he thought a vote could happen by Tuesday afternoon.
    "I learned a lot," said Steve Tisch, co-owner of the New York Giants. "These are five very qualified candidates. All were articulate, energetic and extremely impressive."
    The owners also unanimously approved these voting procedures:
    _ If no one gets the required votes on the first ballot, all five candidates will remain in contention for at least two more ballots.
    _ After that, Tagliabue and the search committee will determine if any candidates should be dropped from subsequent ballots, and whether to vote by open roll call.
    _ They also could ask each owner to rank the candidates in order of preference.
    <!-- end body-content -->
     
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