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LEAGUE NOTES

          The NFLPA has filed a grievance against the Bengals
     that claims the team violated the CBA when they reached a
     five-year, $23M deal with WR Carl Pickens, and as a result,
     the team "could lose their free-agent franchise tag."  But
     Bengals President Mike Brown said nine teams have followed a
     format similar to the Bengals: "We checked with the
     management council, and they approved what we did.  We
     thought we were following the letter of the law."  An
     arbitrator's ruling is expected February 10 (ENQUIRER,
     1/26).  The NFLPA also filed a similar grievance against the
     Cardinals, 49ers and Packers (ARIZONA REPUBLIC, 1/26).
          DEFENDING THEIR STANCE: USSF Secretary General Hank
     Steinbrecher said that a deal for a new contract with the
     U.S. women's soccer team "was possible" by the end of the
     week but called negotiations "sensitive."  Steinbrecher
     added that the team "seeks significant raises" (USA TODAY,
     1/26).  In Denver, Vicki Michaelis reports that U.S. Women's
     soccer team member Mia Hamm, appearing at a Englewood, CO,
     soccer clinic, discussed the contract dispute and said that
     she and her teammates "are not trying to bolster their bank
     accounts as much as they are trying to take advantage of
     their high-profile podium and build on what they began
     during their magical ride last summer."  Hamm: "Everyone
     talks about leaving their environment a little bit better
     than it was when you got there, and that's what we're trying
     to do."  Meanwhile, Hamm's teammate Michele Akers "stood
     alongside" President Clinton during a news conference Monday
     at which Clinton unveiled a $27M proposal to "help women get
     paid equal wages for doing the same work as men" (DENVER
     POST, 1/26).  Akers: "We still have a ways to go.  We're
     still being discriminated against.  We still are not paid
     equally" (WASHINGTON POST, 1/25).   
          STRANGE SCHEDULE? In Toronto, Tom Tebbutt writes on the
     "awkward" scheduling at this week's Australian Open which
     has resulted in an "unusual second-week lineup" that has two
     of four women's semifinalists playing without a day's rest. 
     Tebbutt: "The main reason for the clumsy setup is that event
     organizers don't believe in the drawing power of the women
     and are hesitant to have day or night sessions involving
     women-only matches" (Toronto GLOBE & MAIL, 1/26).
          MORE NOTES: In Detroit, Lynn Henning reports on MLB
     team owners voting to increase MLB Commissioner Bud Selig's
     authority and writes that the owners "now want the
     commissioner to be a tiger.  They want Bud Selig to unleash
     all the authoritarian terror he can muster."  MLBPA Dir of
     Communications Greg Bouris notes Selig "only has power" over
     the owner's "domain, not power over the [MLBPA]."  Bouris:
     "It's an interesting (issue) right now, but there's still a
     collective bargaining agreement in place" (DETROIT NEWS,
     1/26)....In K.C., David Boyce writes on MLS Commissioner Don
     Garber visiting the K.C. Wizards, who averaged 8,183 fans
     this past season.  Garber, on the attendance: "The problem
     in [K.C.] has been a lack of focus."  Garber said MLS will
     "succeed or fail with our ability to build our own
     stadiums."  Garber: "There are 60 million people who call
     themselves soccer fans.  Those 60 million people have not
     been tapped into" (K.C. STAR, 1/26). 
     

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