Players Union Asks Circuit to Reject NFL 'Deflategate' Appeal
The NFL Players Association told a federal appeals court Monday that League Commissioner Roger Goodell violated labor and arbitration law by suspending quarterback Tom Brady for an alleged football tampering scheme.
December 09, 2015 at 03:38 AM
5 minute read
The NFL Players Association told a federal appeals court Monday that League Commissioner Roger Goodell violated labor and arbitration law by suspending quarterback Tom Brady for an alleged football tampering scheme.
In the latest salvo over the deflation of footballs before the New England Patriots-Indianapolis Colts playoff game in January, lawyers for the players union urged the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit to reject the NFL's appeal filed in October and affirm the decision of Southern District Judge Richard Berman vacating Goodell's four-game suspension of Brady.
Goodell, the attorneys said in a brief filed ahead of oral argument on March 3, 2016, violated the league's collective bargaining agreement (CBA) by claiming “unlimited authority to discipline players however he pleases,” defying both the requirement of notice and “collectively bargained penalties for specific misconduct.”
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