Wed, Mar 31, 2004 - Page 20 News List

NFL team owners to give commissioner a new deal

AP , PALM BEACH, FLORIDA

NFL owners are ready to give commissioner Paul Tagliabue a new contract and keep instant replay.

The questions are how long Tagliabue's term will last and if replay will be made permanent.

Pittsburgh owner Dan Rooney, who heads the committee that oversees league operations, said Monday the 32 owners agreed unanimously to extend Tagliabue's contract, which expires in May 2005. Rooney said the extension could be as long as three years, depending on the wishes of the 63-year-old commissioner.

The extension of replay, meanwhile, was presented to the owners in three possible forms:

-- A renewal of the current coaches' challenge rule for five years.

-- Permanent renewal with the current system.

-- ?Permanent renewal with an additional challenge given to a team that makes two successful challenges.

The vote on replay is likely to come Tuesday or Wednesday.

Owners also discussed some touchy financial issues, including what several considered a widening gap between haves and have-nots that could hurt the on-field parity that has characterized the past decade.

"With our stadium and ticket pricing and market, we are 32nd out of 32," said Indianapolis owner Jimmy Irsay, who went into his own pocket to pay a record US$34.5 million signing bonus to quarterback Peyton Manning, last season's co-MVP.

"There has to be some way to create a shift there, and it's the issue in the NFL right now, revenue sharing."

Owners such as Irsay, Rooney and Buffalo's Ralph Wilson, among others, are concerned about the disparity in cash flow between their teams and teams such as Washington.

Redskins owner Daniel Snyder paid out nearly US$50 million in signing bonuses in the first two days of free agency this year. Even with a salary cap, some owners believe it's difficult for teams with less cash to match that, even though Snyder's spending has failed to improve his team in the five years he's owned it.

Tagliabue predicted Monday the owners would renew the NFL Trust, a method by which teams share revenues from the sale of licensed merchandise. But that amounts to only about US$4 million per team a year -- the cost of a decent cornerback -- and Snyder and Dallas' Jerry Jones want to continue discussions that would allow them to market their own products without cutting in others.

This story has been viewed 2188 times.
TOP top