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SBD/January 31, 2012/Leagues and Governing Bodies
David Cornwell Blasts NFLPA Leadership, Claims De Smith Misled Players About CBA
Published January 31, 2012
Pryor and Cedric Benson |
CORNWELL CLAIMS CBA NOT AS GOOD AS ADVERTISED: Smith was a surprise winner of the NFLPA job three years ago after the death of long-running Exec Dir Gene Upshaw. A DC insider but football outsider, Smith promised to go toe-to-toe with the owners in the CBA talks. He disbanded the union and funded antitrust lawsuits against the NFL as the players were locked out. An appeals court let the lockout stand in May, and a new CBA ultimately was reached on Aug. 4, saving the '12 season. Cornwell’s contention is that the new CBA is not nearly as good for the players as Smith is making it out to be. Pointing to how revenues are divided among different categories and shared differently, Cornwell calls the divisions a “red herring” intended to distract players. While players get 55% of media revenue, a much-touted number, they still only get 47% of “All Revenues.” "Players sacrificed significant revenue to solve an internal dispute [revenue sharing] among team owners,” Cornwell writes. At the end of the letter, Cornwell appears to call for Smith’s ouster. He did not, however, directly state in the memo his desire to run again for the top NFLPA slot, nor did he directly back another candidate for the position. “Given that the term of the new CBA is 10 years, you and your clients may conclude that they and two generations of future players are stuck with it,” Cornwell writes to the agents. “No doubt the major elements of the CBA are here to stay for the next 10 years. But, that does not mean that players are stuck with the man who negotiated the deal.”






