NFL Report: The Commissioner's View --
Winter 2000
NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue recently sent the following e-mail to
600,000 fans who subscribe to the NFL.com Newsletter. The subject is player
conduct and the NFL’s programs and policies to ensure responsible off-field
behavior.
Dear NFL Fans: As
you continue to enjoy the 2000 NFL season, we know that you appreciate the
tremendous amount of planning and preparation that goes into the performance
of our teams and players on the football field.
Far less evident, however, is the amount of hard work that the NFL and its
clubs put into supporting positive player performance off the field. We
share your concern when the misconduct of a player victimizes other
individuals. We know that the misconduct of even a few players can dampen
the respect of fans, especially young people’s for pro athletes generally.
The wrongs of a small number of players can taint the image of an entire
league and all of its player, past, present, and future.
Inappropriate conduct by athletes attracts huge headlines and often leads
fans to question how seriously sports leagues and teams treat this issue.
You understandably want to know what is being done to keep players on the
right path in their lives off the field.
I
believe you recognize that the vast majority of NFL players are good people.
In fact, many are outstanding citizens who do great work in their
communities. Nevertheless, we as a league need to have, and do have, a wide
array of thoughtful and effective programs and policies in place to support
our players both on and off the field.
Why? Because our players, like other pro athletes, deal with pressures and
responsibilities that few others in our society face at a comparable age.
Only a few years after high school graduation, they undergo a radical
transformation in their roles, responsibilities, and public accountability.
Whatever the background of an individual player, whether from fortunate or
difficult economic or family backgrounds, many young men are ill-prepared
for the challenges they will encounter as NFL players.
Our office and the NFL’s teams have been working hard with players on their
off-field responsibilities for many years through a variety of programs and
policies. NFL players receive assistance from us and are held accountable by
us on matters ranging from gambling to substance abuse to possession of
weapons to inappropriate treatment of women. In
1991, we created NFL Player Programs (now called Player Development) as a
league-wide initiative to standardize and supplement individual club
off-field programs. Now, every NFL team has a Player Development Coordinator
to implement a comprehensive set of programs with full club support. The
mission of Player Development is to assist all players and their families in
three key areas: --
Training and Development (including an annual Rookie Symposium for every
drafted player, annual Life Skills training for every player on every team,
and a partnership with the NCAA that sends selected NFL players to speak to
college football teams on conduct and other life skills issues). --
Career Transition (including financial education, continuing
education/degree completion, and nonfootball career internships). --
Player Assistance (known in many companies as the EAP’s Employee Assistance
Program).
Under Player Assistance, NFL players and their families are provided
resources to address a wide range of issues. Domestic abuse, for example, is
a major problem in our society that affects millions of people in all walks
of life. In the NFL, we are confronting it aggressively through education,
counseling, and disciplinary action.
There are extensive presentations on domestic violence at our Rookie
Symposium and in our team Life Skills Training sessions, including the use
of video and live dramatic scenarios to engage players fully in the
seriousness of this issue. These presentations expose every player in the
league annually to education on how to avoid becoming involved in domestic
abuse situations.
Players and their families also receive printed materials on domestic abuse
each season, and outside professional counseling, covered by NFL insurance,
is available to NFL families with domestic or other problems. If
arrested for or charged with a crime involving the use or threat of violence
to another person, an NFL player is required to undergo an immediate,
mandatory clinical evaluation by professional experts and, if directed,
appropriate counseling. If the court ultimately determines that he violated
the law, the player then faces mandatory discipline in the form of fines or
suspensions without pay. We
are encouraged that our off-field programs are having a positive impact as
evidenced by the significant decline over the past three years in the number
of players charged with criminal offenses. However, several recent
high-profile cases caused us to re-examine our policies and programs to
determine what more could be done to prevent this type of behavior. In
trying to learn from the unfortunate experiences of others, we spent
considerable time last offseason discussing the issue with owners, coaches,
players, and outside experts.
Last May, we announced a series of enhancements to our approach. They
included: --
The expansion of league-wide pre-employment screening of incoming players to
identify at-risk players better. --
Mandatory intervention to support and counsel at-risk incoming players
identified by the above screening process. --
A requirement that every club hire a full-time Security Director to
supplement the local NFL Security representative employed by the league
(many clubs already have a staff security director). --
Additional training of our coaches about off-field player development
issues. We
want you to know that everyone involved in the NFL, team owners, coaches,
club officials, and league officials, recognizes our collective
responsibility to encourage and support proper player conduct on and off the
field. We are just as disappointed as you when players do not live up to
their responsibilities and to the expectations we all have for athletes. You
should know as well that the NFL players as a group strongly support our
policies and programs. They don’t want to be stereotyped by the misconduct
of a few. They want to represent excellence, both on the football field and
in their communities, in the tradition of Walter Payton, Troy Aikman,
Derrick Brooks, and so many NFL players, both past and present.
On
behalf of all NFL teams and players, thank you for your tremendous interest
and support.
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