Early last week, the System Arbitrator who resolves certain grievances between the NFL and NFL Players Association issued a ruling regarding the union’s grievance over the failure to give certain veteran quarterbacks fully guaranteed contracts. Since then, no one has said a single word about it.
The NFL won the case. The decision appears in a 61-page written document. For whatever reason, the NFL has kept it all quiet.
The NFLPA has every reason to not talk about it; they lost. The NFL has no reason to not disclose the outcome.
Unless it does. As previously explained, the NFL hopes to secure an agreement from the union on an 18-game season.
During a Wednesday morning media conference call with NFL executives, I asked when the decision will be released and why it has been delayed.
“No information on any outcome from the collusion case,” NFL executive V.P. of communications Jeff Miller said. “I’m sure when we have news, we’ll share it.”
But they have news. They’re just keeping it to themselves. At this point, it seems to be about more than not taking a victory lap. It feels like something else is going on.
We’ve got a few ideas. For now, we’ll keep digging and waiting and wondering when the 61 pages will be released, what they will reveal, and what they won’t.
PublishedFebruary 11, 2025 10:11 PM EST|UpdatedFebruary 11, 2025 10:11 PM ESTFacebookTwitterEmailCopy LinkThe outcome of Sunday's Super Bowl between the Philade
Marcel Louis-JacquesFeb 11, 2025, 09:19 PM ETCloseMarcel Louis-Jacques joined ESPN in 2019 as a beat reporter covering the Buffalo Bills, before switching to th
Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs are still licking their wounds following a beatdown in Super Bowl 59 against the Philadelphia Eagles. The 40-22 final
Todd ArcherFeb 11, 2025, 06:05 PM ETCloseTodd Archer is an NFL reporter at ESPN and covers the Dallas Cowboys. Archer has covered the NFL since 1997 and Dallas