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Thread: A Peek Inside the NFL Meetings.......................

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    Mello Jello soulman's Avatar
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    A Peek Inside the NFL Meetings.......................

    Inside the NFL Meetings

    Annual ritual begins in earnest today Andrew Brandt

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    Print This March 26, 2012, 06:01 AM EST




    The 2012 NFL annual meetings open today, a rite of spring in which NFL owners and team personnel end their winter hibernation and surface in a plush resort to discuss the issues of the day affecting the league and its teams.


    Aside from a show of relative austerity last year during the lockout – when the meetings were held in New Orleans -- the meetings return to the idyllic Breakers resort in Palm Beach, Florida.
    The itinerary takes a familiar pattern each year. Team personnel would arrive throughout the weekend, with an opening speaker on Sunday afternoon. I remember being especially intrigued by Eric Schmidt of Google one year, who gave a fascinating lecture.

    This year’s speaker was former President Bill Clinton. (And the topic was;"How to claim a blowjob is not sex and get away with it". This topic was of particular interest to married NFL executives with hot secretaries)

    Meeting rituals

    The meetings open every year with a short film of the sights and sounds of the previous season, with the best that NFL Films has to offer. After the video, with everyone feeling the energy and passion of the season, Commissioner Roger Goodell welcomes the crowd and gives proper respect and mention to the two Super Bowl teams. He then moves on to address the state of the game and the challenges that lie ahead.


    Goodell’s address is concise and purposeful. This year he will certainly speak to the security of labor peace yet the challenges ahead with increasing options for fans and viewers -- a theme of this year’s meetings will certainly be the in-stadium presentation, with a priority for teams to improve the game day experience.


    The gathering then splits with ownership and chief executives in one room and coaches and “working club executives,” as people like myself were identified, in another. The Competition Committee presents its report at different times to different audiences -- honing its presentation before its owner presentation -- on topics ranging from time of games, penalties, officiating points of emphasis, overtime rules, player safety, tampering rules and specific proposals for rule changes.


    Proposals for rules changes – often prompted by an egregious call the previous season -- will be offered to the group, explained by the owner or team official putting forth the proposed change, and at some point voted on. Those certain to pass will be submitted to vote; those fraught with controversy or extensive debate are usually “tabled” until a later meeting in May, if at all.

    An interesting proposal this year will be the discussion of moving the trade deadline back from Week Six until Week Eight. It does not seem to be a bold proposal, but may add some “buzz” to the concept of trading that has been largely foreign to the NFL compared to other leagues.
    ICONMike Brown can be a polarizing presence at the meetings.


    Interesting interplay

    There are always interesting encounters between owners at the meetings. Mike Brown of the Bengals will certainly make a point to draw the ire of large market owners. And we can expect the recent Cap reductions given to the Redskins and Cowboys to come up, perhaps with some red-faced intensity, by Dan Snyder and Jerry Jones, who have filed a grievance against challenging its ruling. (Cocktail hour could be quite interesting tonight! Martini olives and onions might be flying before all is said and done)


    Also on Monday, teams are given a list of compensatory draft selections. The carping over compensatory picks is an annual rite of spring for team personnel.It is also always interesting to see the annual picture of the head coaches assembled, with sometimes as many as a third of them new faces.


    Sidelights

    A few agents always attend. Drew Rosenhaus is a ubiquitous presence, notorious for parading both his players and having an attractive female companion with him to entice team executives to stop by. And some business is done with agents and negotiations. I spent many a breakfast or lunch visiting with agents at the meetings. (Once a sleaze bag always a sleaze bag. I wonder if Clinton drops by as well?)


    On Tuesday and Wednesday, coaches meet the media for breakfast, with coaches treating the mandatory sessions with everything from interest to indifference or impatience. Tuesday also features the coaches’ golf tournament, a time when owners have used their absence to pass rules changes. (Comes under the heading of what they don't know won't hurt them and if they're not around to object...........oh well)


    The meetings wrap on Wednesday, with some voting on Competition Committee issues but little in the way of monumental decisions coming out of any meeting. Replay is usually extended with some possible modifications, and some officiating changes are made based on the hot-button issue from the prior season.


    No conflict

    I would be surprised if Goodell steps on some of the land mines in recent weeks -- the Cap penalties to the Cowboys and Redskins and the harsh discipline invoked on the Saints. Although these are working meetings, this is a time for fellowship and a bit of relaxation among the membership; Goodell saves the hard conversations for private meetings away from the public view. Moreover, this is not a time to embarrass anyone, as there are short memories all around.
    On Wednesday afternoon, the limos soon pull up and owners alert their private planes to fire up. The meetings have ended, recess is over, back to work. (I'd love to have a job that includes a fleet of limo's and a Gulfstream or two. I'm sure George McCaskey and the Bears contingent fly commercial. Probably first class but commercial none the less)


    Follow me on Twitter at adbrandt.
    Last edited by soulman; 03-26-2012 at 07:03 PM.
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    Senior Member lklrlolnlilklsox's Avatar
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    I'd love for the trade deadline to get pushed back. Teams are always so hesitant to give up on a season by week six, and while week eight would offer only a slightly clearer picture, I think it does increase the potential for midseason trades. I'd like it to be week 10, but I will be happy to see any kind of extension.

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    Mello Jello soulman's Avatar
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Gift received at 11-07-2012, 07:28 AM from GermansbombedPH
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Message: downhere in Northern Mexico(aka San Antonio Texas), we tend to share this....not my personal favorite, but I'm definately in the minority.Trophy
Gift received at 01-30-2012, 01:48 PM from Dagan81
Message: Because you're the best God damn poster on this message board!  And, a true friend at that!9599
    Quote Originally Posted by lklrlolnlilklsox View Post
    I'd love for the trade deadline to get pushed back. Teams are always so hesitant to give up on a season by week six, and while week eight would offer only a slightly clearer picture, I think it does increase the potential for midseason trades. I'd like it to be week 10, but I will be happy to see any kind of extension.
    A move in the right direction is better than no move at all. It does set up some interesting MLB and NHL type scenarios though where teams in contention may buy some help to push them over the top and the lesser teams
    pick up some additional draft picks that help balance out competition. Interesting concept that we've never seen in the NFL before.
    I'm getting to that age where a lifetime warranty just doesn't mean as much to me anymore as an afternoon nap.



    Honey Badger Don't Care. Honey Badger Don't Give a Shit.


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