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.
Taiwanese tennis veteran Hsieh Su-wei (謝淑薇) and her Latvian partner Jelena Ostapenko finished runners-up in the Wimbledon women's doubles final yesterday, losing 6-3, 2-6, 4-6. The three-set match against Veronika Kudermetova of Russia and Elise Mertens of Belgium lasted two hours and 23 minutes. The loss denied 39-year-old Hsieh a chance to claim her 10th Grand Slam title. Although the Taiwanese-Latvian duo trailed 1-3 in the opening set, they rallied with two service breaks to take it 6-3. In the second set, Mertens and Kudermetova raced to a 5-1 lead and wrapped it up 6-2 to even the match. In the final set, Hsieh and
Taiwanese tennis veteran Hsieh Su-wei and her Latvian partner, Jelena Ostapenko, advanced to the Wimbledon women’s doubles final on Friday, defeating top seeds Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic and Taylor Townsend of the US in straight sets. The fourth-seeded duo bounced back quickly after losing their opening service game, capitalizing on frequent unforced errors by their opponents to take the first set 7-5. Maintaining their momentum in the second set, Hsieh and Ostapenko broke serve early and held their lead to close out the match 6-4. They are set to face the eighth-seeded pair of Veronika Kudermetova of Russia and Elise Mertens
Outside Anfield, the red sea of tributes to Diogo Jota and his brother, Andre Silva, has continued to grow this week, along with questions over whether Liverpool could play at Preston today, their first game since the brothers’ tragic loss. Inside Anfield, and specifically a grieving Liverpool dressing room, there was no major debate over the pre-season friendly. The English Premier League champions intend to honor their teammate in the best way they know how. It would be only 10 days since the deaths of Jota and Silva when Liverpool appear at Deepdale Stadium for what is certain to be a hugely
ON A KNEE: In the MLB’s equivalent of soccer’s penalty-kicks shoot-out, the game was decided by three batters from each side taking three swings each off coaches Kyle Schwarber was nervous. He had played in Game 7 of the MLB World Series and homered for the US in the World Baseball Classic (WBC), but he had never walked up to the plate in an All-Star Game swing-off. No one had. “That’s kind of like the baseball version of a shoot-out,” Schwarber said after homering on all three of his swings, going down to his left knee on the final one, to overcome a two-homer deficit. That held up when Jonathan Aranda fell short on the American League’s final three swings, giving the National League a 4-3 swing-off win after