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A little help? Quick question...

ladeback

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I have a project in school right now and I was just wondering if anyone here knows how the commissioner of the NFL (or any sport for that matter) gets to be the commissioner... I would think there is some kind of vote or something. If anyone knows please respond to this post and let me know.

BTW mods, sorry if this is the wrong place to post something like this, but I am desperate. If any of you know, please fill me in. I didn't know which forum to post this in, so I just went with the most popular and visited forum on the site. Feel free to move this thread if need be. Thanks for any help I get.
 
I don't know how one becomes commissioner, but I know that Gary Bettmen is the worst commissioner in professional sports, if you wanna call hockey a professional sport.
 
ladeback said:
I have a project in school right now and I was just wondering if anyone here knows how the commissioner of the NFL (or any sport for that matter) gets to be the commissioner... I would think there is some kind of vote or something. If anyone knows please respond to this post and let me know.

BTW mods, sorry if this is the wrong place to post something like this, but I am desperate. If any of you know, please fill me in. I didn't know which forum to post this in, so I just went with the most popular and visited forum on the site. Feel free to move this thread if need be. Thanks for any help I get.


bad project...I am still trying to figure out how Bush became president
 
GRT8 said:
bad project...I am still trying to figure out how BUSH became president
Maybe by getting more votes than the other jerk? :shakeno:

Ozzy rules!!
 
Danny said:
Maybe by getting more votes than the other jerk? :shakeno:

Ozzy rules!!


haaaaaaaaaaaaaa:roflmao:..................but in no way saying who I voted for:wink:
 
You got it, phinphan11... I found out that the owners of the teams vote on the commissioner. Thanks for your help, guys.
 
Here's some stuff I pulled from NFL d-o-t com for you, just keep going through their search engine. Type in Tagliabue and it came up with plenty of results. I went through the 1st ten or so. hopefully it proves useful:

Tagliabue's contract extended through '07

NEW YORK (July 19, 2004) -- Paul Tagliabue will remain as NFL commissioner through the end of the 2007 season.

Tagliabue has officially agreed to the new deal, announced last March, to extend his current contract that would have expired after next season, league officials said.

Tagliabue will be 67 when the contract expires -- he would have retired at 65 had he stuck to his current deal.

The deal has been approved unanimously by the NFL's 32 owners.

Tagliabue, who had been the NFL's chief outside lawyer, took over after Pete Rozelle stepped down in March 1989.

At the time, he was the candidate of newer owners after a committee of the "old-guard" appointed by Rozelle recommended Jim Finks, the New Orleans Saints general manager.


Tagliabue's skills help NFL flourish



NEW YORK (April 15, 2004) -- Paul Tagliabue was a successful Washington lawyer for two decades. Still, the political skills he has used to persuade NFL owners to follow his lead came more from his teen-age years on the schoolyards of Jersey City.


"I learned street smarts -- how to persuade, to cajole," he says. "Sometimes you had to have a fist fight just to get on the basketball court."

Tagliabue's 15-year tenure as NFL commissioner should be winding down. He will turn 64 in November and his contract expires in 13 months.

Instead, he could stay on for three more years after the 32 often-contentious owners agreed three weeks ago they wanted him in charge through upcoming labor and television negotiations. Street smarts can work particularly well when dealing with the networks.

Tagliabue might have a lower profile than his predecessor, Pete Rozelle. But there's no question he has been a success.

"Literally on the run, he has retrofitted the entire NFL operation to make it the most successful in all of sports," said NBA commissioner David Stern, one of the few people with firsthand knowledge of what Tagliabue's job entails.

One measure of Tagliabue's success is that since he replaced Rozelle in 1989, the NFL has been the only major professional sports league without a work stoppage.

That has helped him engineer deals for unprecedented figures. The last TV deal was $17.6 billion for eight years, and the new one will produce a lot more because football ratings are easily the highest in sports.

And the new NFL Network gives Tagliabue more leverage.

"The television situation is phenomenal, the relationship with the players' union is great," Pittsburgh owner Dan Rooney said in announcing the contract extension. "We're entering an important period and we want him to continue to lead us through it."

Tagliabue's accomplishments stem largely from an early organizational change.

When Rozelle was commissioner, he ran daily operations but was subordinate to owner-run committees in several key areas, notably labor. That made him almost helpless to stop or end strikes like the ones in 1982 and 1987 that made his last decade as commissioner his worst.

Tagliabue's biggest accomplishment came early, when he persuaded and cajoled the owners into giving him the power Rozelle lacked.

It's easy to forget he almost didn't get the job. It took seven months from the time Rozelle announced his retirement for the owners to elect Tagliabue over New Orleans general manager Jim Finks.

"I wanted a man with a football background," Wellington Mara of the Giants said after his switch to Tagliabue helped end the stalemate. "But I'm satisfied. Maybe it will be like the time when Forrest Evashevski turned down the Green Bay coaching job and they had to settle for Vince Lombardi."

To Mara and others, Tagliabue is indeed Lombardi; Mara and many of the "old guard" Finks supporters now are Tagliabue's staunchest backers.

One major reason is labor peace.

When Tagliabue took office, there was no collective bargaining agreement. The 1987 strike had ended with no contract and the union filing an antitrust suit against the league.

The chief NFL negotiator was Jack Donlan, backed by a six-man committee that included four hard-liners: Hugh Culverhouse of Tampa Bay; Tex Schramm of Dallas; Joe Robbie of Miami; and Mike Brown of Cincinnati. One negotiating session ended when Schramm told union negotiators: "The owners are the stewards of the game and the players are the transient workers."

Tagliabue changed that.


Paul Tagliabue's relationship with union chief Gene Upshaw has helped bring prosperity to the NFL.

One of his first acts as commissioner was to sit down for a quiet, private dinner with Gene Upshaw, executive director of the union.

Then he insisted the owners revise NFL bylaws to give the commissioner control over all league committees. That allowed Tagliabue to replace Donlan with Harold Henderson and appoint less intransigent owners to the Management Council.

Still, it took two more years for the union to get a contract, prompted by a jury finding for the union in the antitrust suit. That resulted in, at Tagliabue's urging, the owners agreeing to free agency. The players then agreed to a salary cap.

Since then, the CBA has been extended four times, the league and the union refer to each other as "partners," and talks are beginning on extending the agreement beyond 2008.

"What Paul recognized is that the enemy is not the players," Upshaw says. "As long as there is communication, there are not likely to be as many problems."

That's one example of Tagliabue's schoolyard-honed political ability.

Another came on his first weekend as commissioner, when he chose to dispel what West Coast owners felt was an East Coast bias in the league office by flying west for personal visits with the owners of the Chargers, 49ers and Seahawks.

He is always open to advice.

A number of former Rozelle advisers remain among his most important aides. He relied heavily on the late George Young, who became the NFL's vice president for football operations after retiring as general manager of the Giants after the 1997 season.

Upshaw also advises Tagliabue -- he had a major role in persuading him to call off games the weekend after the Sept. 11 attacks. Typically, the NFL led the way, getting other sports to postpone games.

Tagliabue also has pushed hard to add minorities in positions of authority in a league where more than 70 percent of the players are black.

In 1987, there was one black among the 200 or so league officials at the NFL's annual meeting and no minorities in any important team or league offices.

Now there are five black head coaches; a dozen top team officials are black; plus there are high-ranking league executives such as Henderson and former players Gene Washington, Art Shell and Mike Haynes. Shell, who in 1989 became the first black head coach of the modern era, could end up with the position Young had in the league office.

Naturally, there also are dissenters.

Owners in smaller markets worry about a growing discrepancy in revenue in a league that set the standard for revenue sharing 40 years ago, when it agreed to an even split of television income.

During Tagliabue's term as commissioner, 21 of the 32 teams have built new stadiums or renovated old ones, outfitting them with club seats and luxury suites. Some of the financing has been public, some private, and some has come from a league fund designed to loan up to $150 million for stadium construction.

But those without new buildings are at a disadvantage. Indianapolis owner Jimmy Irsay had to use his personal money for Peyton Manning's record $34.5 million signing bonus. And luxury suites can go for far more in larger markets, giving those teams more up-front cash to spend on free agents.

"I think Paul has done a great job with labor, but I'm not so sure we need all those new stadiums," Buffalo owner Ralph Wilson says. "In my opinion, all it does is increase the burden on small markets. We contribute to the stadium fund, but we can't get a quarter of the money for a luxury suite that they can get in New York or Philadelphia."

Tagliabue views his administration as a continuation of his predecessor's -- adjusted to reflect the changing times.

"You can look at Pete as a public relations man and look at me as a lawyer," the former Georgetown basketball player said. "But we share two attributes: We both love sports, and we realized that the team is more important than the individual. It's more about 'we' than it is about 'I.' "

Here's the difference, one resulting from free agency and the salary cap:

Rozelle coined the phrase "on any given Sunday" to describe a league in which any team could win on any day. Still, during his administration, strong teams stayed strong from year to year and weak teams lingered at the bottom.

These days, a big loser can become a big winner almost instantly -- and vice versa.

"Now it's 'any given season,' " Tagliabue says.

He'll be around for a few more of those.
 
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