NFL Fines 100 Players, Dozens Of Employees
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That document claims the NFLPA is "now on notice of financial actions that may be criminal" and cites "immediate threats requiring prompt actions" -- namely, potential actions by the National Labor Relations Board over "unfair business practices" and a "lapse of fiduciary duty oversight practices" during the tenure of NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell Jr.
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The NFL players' union has been rocked by high-level resignations from Lloyd Howell and JC Tretter after a "Pablo Torre Finds Out" episode sparked controversy. Here's what Eagles players think.
NFLPA chief strategy officer JC Tretter is resigning from his position, three days after Lloyd Howell stepped down as executive director of the players’ union. Tretter told CBS Sports on Sunday that he doesn’t want to be considered for the NFLPA’s interim executive director position and denied he played any role in undermining
Joel Bitonio, an alternate union rep and friend of resigning president JC Tretter, acknowledges the "vulnerable position" of the players' association amid leadership exodus.
The Washington Commanders running back also defended the search process that ended with Lloyd Howell's hiring in 2023.
The NFL Players Association is embroiled in staff scandal and turnover, with executive director Lloyd Howell recently resigning amid investigations into past lawsuits, apparent conflicts of interest and questionable expensing practices.
The now-former NFLPA executive director has resigned following news that he used union funds to pay for a trip to Magic City strip club.
Ferguson stressed the most critical next step for the NFLPA is identifying and installing the right interim leader to steer the union through its self-made turbulence. He spoke repeatedly of culture issues that go deeper than strip clubs and side deals that recently came to light.
NFL players have had to find out their own NFLPA leaders weren't being transparent over owners' efforts to lower their paydays. Thank journalists for the reveal, but every athlete should take notice.
Attorney Peter Ginsberg, a lawyer at Moskowitz Colson Ginsberg & Schulman who has represented several NFL players over many years, told ESPN: “By agreeing to a confidentiality agreement, the union purposefully blocked the players from receiving crucial ...
Mike Florio opens the mailbag to answer questions surrounding where agents fall in the relationship between the NFL and union, if flag football could phase out the league, and favorite football movie.