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This may be a merge-worthy thread, but I thought it deserved it's own line of reasoning.
Here's where the dilemma lies with Brady going to the mattresses with Goodell on this suspension. Rice and Peterson had some cause to contest Goodell's decision in their cases. Rice's case, for example was pretty clear cut. There was a double-jeopardy thing going from the start.
Brady however has a totally different situation on his hands. Goodell has heard the situation and made a ruling based on the personal conduct clause. He's backed it up with reasonable evidence and given really decent documentation on why he's ruled as he has.
Now, let's just say, for the sake of argument that Brady goes to court and manages somehow to win. Let's say he goes into a Federal Court and gets a judge to overturn Goodell's ruling on the Collective Bargaining agreement clause that allows him to assign and enforce suspensions for various infractions.
If I were an owner I would see this as an opportunity to take a long hard look at the collective bargaining agreement and see just what else I'm not happy with because clearly a federal judge has already ruled that it is invalid. So, the owners would be in a position to say (since the NFLPA has successfully undermined their own CBA,) that they also can modify the terms of the CBA in instances that they feel are not advantageous or beneficial to the league in general.
IE, Y'all are ******.
And I'm enough of a dick, if I were an owner, that's exactly what I'd be telling the NFLPA reps quietly right now. "You negotiated for the CBA, you want to throw it all away? By all means. There's no reason we need to comply with a BUNCH of that ****."
Here's where the dilemma lies with Brady going to the mattresses with Goodell on this suspension. Rice and Peterson had some cause to contest Goodell's decision in their cases. Rice's case, for example was pretty clear cut. There was a double-jeopardy thing going from the start.
Brady however has a totally different situation on his hands. Goodell has heard the situation and made a ruling based on the personal conduct clause. He's backed it up with reasonable evidence and given really decent documentation on why he's ruled as he has.
Now, let's just say, for the sake of argument that Brady goes to court and manages somehow to win. Let's say he goes into a Federal Court and gets a judge to overturn Goodell's ruling on the Collective Bargaining agreement clause that allows him to assign and enforce suspensions for various infractions.
If I were an owner I would see this as an opportunity to take a long hard look at the collective bargaining agreement and see just what else I'm not happy with because clearly a federal judge has already ruled that it is invalid. So, the owners would be in a position to say (since the NFLPA has successfully undermined their own CBA,) that they also can modify the terms of the CBA in instances that they feel are not advantageous or beneficial to the league in general.
IE, Y'all are ******.
And I'm enough of a dick, if I were an owner, that's exactly what I'd be telling the NFLPA reps quietly right now. "You negotiated for the CBA, you want to throw it all away? By all means. There's no reason we need to comply with a BUNCH of that ****."